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    How far does Hubble see?

    Date: 26 Jan 2011
    Satellite: Hubble Space Telescope
    Depicts: How far does Hubble see?
    Copyright: NASA, ESA

    This diagram shows how Hubble has revolutionised the study of the distant, early Universe. Before Hubble was launched, ground-based telescopes were able to observe up to a redshift of around 1, about half way back through cosmic history. Hubble's latest instrument, Wide Field Camera 3 has identified a candidate galaxy at a redshift of 10 - around 96 per cent of the way back to the Big Bang. The forthcoming NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope will see further still.


    Last Update: 26 Jan 2011

    • Shortcut URL
    • http://sci.esa.int/jump.cfm?oid=48286
    • Latest selection
    • Wide-field image of the Ring Nebula (ground-based image)
    • The geometry and structure of the Ring Nebula
    • The region around the Ring Nebula (Hubble/LBT composite)
    • Image Hi-Res Versions
    • Hi-Res [jpg]
      3,574.86 kb.
    • See also
    • Hubble finds a new contender for galaxy distance record [heic1103]

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