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FP TrendsApril 25, 2020 4:24:11 PM IST
The US space agency has released a brilliant new image of a “star-born firestorm” to mark the 30th anniversary of the Hubble Space Telescope. Scientists have called the image “Cosmic Reef” as it resembles a “coral reef floating in a vast sea of stars.”
The phenomenon took place in a neighboring galaxy, where a giant red nebula (called NGC 2014) and a smaller blue one (called NGC 2020) are part of a star-forming region.
The Hubble Space Telescope is the first major optical telescope to be implemented in April 1990. It was named after the American astronomer Edwin P Hubble, who confirmed that our universe was constantly expanding.
Hubble has been placed in space to observe the most distant stars and galaxiesas well as the planets in our solar system. Throughout his years of service, Hubble has sent “amazing insights into the universe, from nearby planets to the farthest galaxies,” says Thomas Zurbuchen, associate science administrator at NASA headquarters in Washington, DC.
“It was revolutionary launch such a large telescope 30 years ago, and this nerve center of astronomy still offers revolutionary science today, “added Zurbuchen.
Hubble has successfully completed five service missions, the last in May 2009. At 13.2 meters long and weighing approximately 10,886 kg at launch, the telescope is accurate enough to detect a target without deviate more than 7/1000 of an arc second at a distance of 1 mile. Send 150 gigabits of raw data every week.
Hubble was launched after international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency).
Also read: NASA’s oldest observatory: the Hubble Space Telescope celebrates its 30th birthday
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