Fluffy strands of cosmic gas and dust illuminated by bright young stars form a beautiful cloudscape in a neighboring nebula.
The dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 4214 resides about 10 million light-years away. Approximately 10,000 galaxies fill a small area of sky called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. This is the deepest image of ...
They estimate it might lie three times farther out than the widest ring in Hubble’s image. This image of collisional ring galaxy LEDA 1313424, nicknamed the Bullseye, was captured by the Hubble Space ...
This Hubble image shows NGC 6397, a star cluster 8,200 light-years away in the constellation Ara, with its core sparkling like a chest of jewels. This image shows the early Milky Way galaxy, 12.7 ...
“It is immensely gratifying to confirm this long-standing prediction with the Bullseye galaxy.” Hubble’s image provides an angled view of the rings, making them appear unevenly spaced. If seen ...
Scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope have spotted a record-smashing galaxy wrapped in 9 rings of stars — along with the dwarf galaxy that violently plunged through its center.
Apparently NASA's Hubble Space Telescope had captured a ringed galaxy (LEDA 1313424 ... farther out than the widest ring in the captured image.
A new image from NASA's Hubble space telescope shows what's nicknamed The Bullseye. It’s real name is Gargantuan Galaxy Leda 1313424. It has star-filled rings from a blue dwarf galaxy that went ...
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has captured some stunning images of a ‘Grand Design’ spiral galaxy, revealing intricate details of its swirling arms and structure. The Southern Pinwheel ...
NASA, ESA, Imad Pasha (Yale), Pieter van Dokkum (Yale) The Hubble Space Telescope has captured this striking image of an unusual galaxy with a bullseye structure, as nine rings surround its ...
It’s the blue dwarf galaxy visible to the center-left of LEDA 1313424 in the Hubble image. Researchers say the current view captures the state of the Bullseye about 50 million years after the ...
They estimate it might be three times farther out than the widest ring seen in Hubble’s image. Pasha discovered that the Bullseye galaxy’s rings had moved outward almost exactly as predicted by models ...