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NASA Space Science

Hubble Neatly Captures Messier's Ancient Stars 31

New submitter DevotedSkeptic writes "Hubble has produced a crisp image of the Messier 56 Globular Cluster. Messier originally noted that this object was nebula without stars. When he originally viewed the cluster in 1779, telescopes were not powerful enough to see more than a fuzzy ball. The crisp focused view we get from Hubble enables us to easily see the globular cluster and ancient stars contained within. Comparing observations from Hubble with results from the standard theory of stellar evolution, scientists have calculated the age Messier 56 at 13 billion years."
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Hubble Neatly Captures Messier's Ancient Stars

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  • by esldude ( 1157749 ) on Sunday August 26, 2012 @02:29AM (#41127631)
    http://www.amazon.com/The-Day-We-Found-Universe/dp/0307276600/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1345962369&sr=8-1&keywords=the+day+we+discovered+the+universe#reader_0307276600 [amazon.com] Delightful book about how we came to figure out there was more than the milky way, and just how much more. Details the history of the instruments used, the scientists involved and the ideas that battled it out until we understood how big things were. The Hubble is in the lineage of important instruments helping us learn how big all of space is. All the way back to 13 billion years or so of it.
  • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Sunday August 26, 2012 @02:35AM (#41127639) Homepage

    "Hubble has produced a crisp image of the Messier 56 Globular Cluster. Messier originally noted that this object was a nebula without stars. When he originally viewed the cluster in 1779, telescopes were not powerful enough to see more than a fuzzy ball. The crisp focused view we get from Hubble enables us to easily see the globular cluster and the ancient stars contained within. Comparing observations from Hubble with results from the standard theory of stellar evolution, scientists have calculated the age of Messier 56 at 13 billion years."

    And this was an easy one.

  • I wonder if there is a God of Gods?

    Or do you? A question only you can answer...

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    Yes.

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    Yes.

    What would those be called?

    On this planet they're known as Humans, regardless of whether they believe in themselves.

    How does Mitt Romney fit in this?

    The Universe is really big; Yes, large enough for even his ego. The planet on the other hand...

    Can be find a way?

    No, "be" isn't a proper subject.

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    Woah, slow down. Of course gods die. Even the mythical ones have been dying ever since we started dreaming them up. See also: Greek Mythology.

    When a god dies it doesn't spawn a new god, otherwise that "When Animals Attack" show would have an ending more like "Planet of the Apes".

    My God, the guy is barely out of diapers! And what of George Burns?

    I'm pretty sure "My God" implies slavery... George Burns was the best God, IMO.

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