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Space Science

Hubble Snaps Photo Of A Galaxy's Edge 20

Adam Attarian writes: "Some really cool stuff is coming out of that telescope in the sky. Take a look at this. That's Galaxy NGC 4013, as never seen before. CNN has the story here. Viewing the galaxy from the side showed a large density of intersteller dust, resulting in a large black lateral band. Quite the site!" This is an amazing picture.
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Hubble Snaps Photo Of A Galaxy's Edge

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  • For fans of these kinds of pictures, Astronomy Picture of the Day [nasa.gov] is hard to beat. They have a this same picure [nasa.gov] for [goatse.cx] today.
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  • by Skyshadow ( 508 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @04:31PM (#391037) Homepage
    I saw some program on the Discovery Channel a while ago that new software in ground-based telescopes using adaptive optics allowed them to more or less completely filter out the effects of the atmosphere.

    Given that, they should easily be superior to the Hubble, since they have larger mirrors, right?

    Then why are all of the really cool pictures of space crap from the freakin' Hubble? Is it a PR thing, trying to justify the cost of a space telescope when the ground 'scopes actually do a better job now? Or did the Discovery Channel (gasp!) misinform me?

    Obviously, I'm not an astronomer. Obviously, one of you must be. Help me out.

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  • You are a pretty funny troll, but a lot of people really have this mentality.

    BIG SCIENCE is exactly the kind of thing that the government should support, or at least encourage. Taking that money and throwing it at the ignorant masses will only result in larger ignorant masses. The money ends up fueling the economy anyway, but at least we end up with some cool gadgets and the accumulation of knowledge.
  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @05:44PM (#391039)
    > I saw some program on the Discovery Channel a while ago that new software in ground-based telescopes using adaptive optics allowed them to more or less completely filter out the effects of the atmosphere.

    The March Scientific American had an article about interferometry in the visual spectrum, and by using it they're starting to get ground-based photos that resolve close binaries and even show the limb darkening on stellar disks. Cool stuff, and more on the way.

    > Is it a PR thing, trying to justify the cost of a space telescope when the ground 'scopes actually do a better job now?

    IANATelescopeEngineer, but it seems that the Hubble does still have an advantage in certain areas. For instance, the methods described in the article I mentioned above suffer because they can't collect very much light. Presumably the Hubble still has a slight edge in various aspects of telescopy.

    Also, remember that ground-based telescopy has enjoyed a generation of progress since the Hubble was designed, so it stands to reason that the Hubble's advantages would be fading and will soon be cancelled altogether.

    It's still giving the coolest pix, though.

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  • > They have a this same picure for today.

    For today's today (01-March) they have a way-cool pic of the sun.

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  • I am not an astronomer either, but I did watch a BBC Horizon documentary [bbc.co.uk] on the construction, failure and repair of the Hubble Space Telescope yesterday evening (sadly, the transcript is not available anymore, it appears). The Hubble has two advantages: no image distortion due to turbulence in the atmosphere, and the ability to detect light frequencies that are completely filtered out by the atmosphere (ultraviolet and infrared, amongst others). Ground-based telescopes are indeed catching up in the first area, but they still can't detect light that never reaches them. Of course, plans are already being made for the Next Generation Space Telescope [nasa.gov], which will have an eight-meter mirror.
  • I don't see thousands of little alien space ships flying around everywhere, better not go here.
  • Well, I think that cutting NASA's budget even farther than it already has been cut isn't necessary.

    For a time, the US put a much greater effort into the space program because we wanted to beat the USSR. It wasn't so much that it was necessary to put a man on the moon, but it looked good because for the US because they did it first. It's easy to tell where the priorities of Bush and Cheney are, that being defense spending and giving large tax cuts, a large percentage of which go to the wealthiest of Americans. It was said in one of Clinton's state of the union addresses that the United States is now the greatest superpower in the history of civilization, but that's not the story you'd get if you listen to the new administration. The new administration would have you believe that our military is in a bad state and it could be damaging to our country, and we need to put our money there. Forget that we have the most advanced military, even though we aren't at the levels during the cold war. Forget that we don't have any real threats and we're on peacekeeping missions and fighting rogue threats of terrorism. Forget that we no longer have an enemy with approximately equal our military power on the other side of the planet. Okay, enough with the sarcasm, it just seems that the spending is very much in the wrong area.

    Science fuels the economy, and one which needs help. Greenspan overshot the mark with all the rate increases, and the longest peacetime expansion of the US economy could soon be over. The economy is in need of help, and fast, and the new administration is proposing spending and cuts that could send the nation back to deficits of the Reagan era. We're spending money we don't know if we really have from the projected surplus and there is a very real possibility that the money in question might not realy be there when we are looking for it in future budgets. Makes you wonder about the Bush/Cheney administration.

  • Also, remember that ground-based telescopy has enjoyed a generation of progress since the Hubble was designed, so it stands to reason that the Hubble's advantages would be fading and will soon be cancelled altogether.

    Old telescopes that are no longer state of the art continue to do important astronomical work. The Palomar Telescope, for example, continues to do important work on asteroids. It's just not as sexy as the stuff that hits the news outlets.

  • This doesn't completely answer your question, but I found this quote in this article [sciam.com], linked from the Astronomy Picture of the Day, which was linked to above by some kind soul.

    The Hubble Space Telescope reigns supreme for taking crisp photographs of faint objects, but ground-based optical interferometers can see, for the brightest stars, details 100 times finer than Hubble can.

    I guess this means that hubble is better only at getting faint objects (which are, perhaps, nearly completely filtered out by our atmosphere, or at least enough to make interferometry ineffective. Meanwhile, bright objects gain enough resolution from these techniques to have surpassed what hubble has gained in super-atmospheric location.

    Next step -- large-mirrored space-bound telescopes using interferometry techniques. If they don't cut NASA's budget too much. :)

    -Puk

  • Also remmember, the Hubble is designed for upgrades, so it might be possible that the Hubble will be upgraded in the next 10 years with the current technology.

    The Hubble has a few special thing, It can point to most of the universe, it can detect different radiations ( mentioned above), and can most likely zoom in on a far away planet to tell us details of their making. Land based can only go horizon to horizon with the small problem of daylight interferance.

    Offtopic.

    I've never been a witness to a solar eclipes. Could someone tell me if the stars are the same as the ones I see at night ?

    ONEPOINT

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    I've never been a witness to a solar eclipes. Could someone tell me if the stars are the same as the ones I see at night ?

    If you see a solar eclipse at 12:00 noon, the stars are the same ones you would see six months later at midnight. During an eclipse, you are able to see stars overhead that would otherwise be obscured by scattered daylight-- similar to the space traveler who can see stars near the sun that are not obscured by atmospheric scatter.

    In any twenty-four hour period, the specific stars which pass overhead are always the same, unless you change latitude (go north or south). However, the time of day at which they pass overhead is affected by what season of the year it is, i.e. where the Earth actually is in its yearly revolution around the Sun.

    Normally, when there is not an eclipse, the stars which are located on the other side of the sun from your vantage point on Earth at any given time of the year are located overhead during the day, but obscured.

    This is what an astrologer means when he talks about the sun being in Pisces or whatever-- he means that if you could see the stars near the sun, it would appear to be "in" one of the twelve constellations of the Zodiac. (Note, in no way do I endorse astrology or mean to blur the distinction between astronomy and astrology.)

    --ccm

  • If you want a few more pictures of NGC 4013 you can find them here [princeton.edu] and here [rmwc.edu]. Quite an impressive display of beauty.
    - Psalms 19:1
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  • FWIW, I am an Astronomer.

    Ground based Adaptive Optics currently does not produce very many pretty pictures. There are basically a number of technical reasons why, some of which will be ironed out in the short term and some of which will take a long time to solve (and involve things like batteries of lasers, which makes me think I will stop doing astronomy and start doing laser engineering if I am not careful.)

    Anyway, for a cool adaptive optics astro pic done by people where I work, look here for Neptune [hawaii.edu] and here for the moons of Jupiter [hawaii.edu]. For some stars, and other cool stuff, check out this image of the galactic center [noao.edu].

    Stars and planets are much easier with adaptive optics than are galaxies, though my housemate does galaxies wtih AO, because whenever you correct for atmospheric distortion, you never do a perfect job. The part of the beam of light that is not corrected can throw light all over your image. This means, if your object is not bright, a bright nearby thing could swamped it. And, in order to get adaptive optics to work, you have to have a bright nearby object to correct your image with. The solution is better adaptive optics systems, so for the mean time, Hubble will continue to surpass ground telescopes for image quality.

  • > It's easy to tell where the priorities of Bush and Cheney are, that being defense spending and giving large tax cuts

    The increased military spending is just another kind of handout. Remember that a few years ago the US Congress approved a defense budget containing billions of dollars for projects that weren't even on the Pentagon's wish list.

    All that money goes somewhere, very much of it to defense contractors. Usually those defense contractors are in one of the committee members' home town. The projects get approved because they pour money into the hands of a legislator's cronies back home, and the legislator benefits because the folk back home like the jobs and increased standard of living... to say nothing of the kickbacks^w campaign donations from the companies that got the money.

    It shouldn't be any surprise that the current administration is wringing their hands about how negelected the military is. It's just a codeword for how neglected the defense contractors are.

    Fasten your seatbelts; we're in it for Regan Era II.

    --
  • <rant>

    "Next Generation Space Telescope"? When are people going to learn how to name things?

    Don't give things names based on how good they are, or how much better they are. Remember the XT computer? "eXtended Technology" my arse.

    </rant>

    But man, I bet that thing gives us some nice pictures.
    --
    Patrick Doyle
  • >"Next Generation Space Telescope"? When are people going to learn how to name things?

    FWIW, I work at the Space Telescope Science Institute (The people who run the Hubble).

    That won't be it's name in the long run. The Hubble wasn't called the Hubble when it was first launched. It was just the 'Space Telescope'. It was later named Hubble. Plans are to do the same thing for NGST ... Launch it just called it NGST, then after it is up and working, give it a real name.

    I've been led to understand by astronomers who work here that there is a reason that this is standard policy on many space missions. They don't want to name something after someone famous, then have it explode upon launch :) Better wait until it is up and working before naming it :)

  • Ah, that makes sense. Thanks.
    --
    Patrick Doyle
  • by jwit ( 168664 )
    Yeah, but if you look closely at the CNN picture, you can see the core of NGC 4013 going nova!

    It might not be as big a discovery as aliens but they might be signalling us.

    Seriously, I didn't see the bright spot at the two other pictures I checked. Did anyone at CNN get creative with Photoshop, or what?

    (Imagining a speech balloon with 'all your base are belong to us'...)
  • To add to what you said...

    Adaptive optics are limited right now by computation, and sensing technology. We know how to correct a wavefront over a 10, 20, or even 50 meter mirror (those are planned) but the computers required to do the job just don't exist yet.

    Secondly, infrared wavelengths pass through interstellar dust much better than longer visible wavelengths. There's a lot of interesting stuff that's hidden inside of dust clouds, so that's what wavelengths astronomers want to use.

    Water vapor in the atmosphere absorbs infrared light, even at the best locations. Space born telescopes don't have this problem. Hubble has got some pretty good infrared sensors on board.

    Same deal with UV, XRays and gamma rays. The atmosphere absorbs those wavelengths, so once again you've got to get above the air.

    Radio telescopes don't have that problem but they are susceptible to interference from other radio sources. The far side of the moon would be a great place for a radio telescope.

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