06 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 Facts About the Hubble Ultra Deep Field

1.How faint are the farthest objects? The Hubble observations detected objects as faint as 30th magnitude. The faintest objects the human eye can see are at sixth magnitude. Ground-based telescopes also can detect 30th-magnitude objects. Those objects, however, are so dim they are lost in the glare of brighter, nearby galaxies. Searching for the faintest objects in the Ultra Deep Field is like trying to find a firefly on the Moon. Light from the farthest objects reached the Hubble teles...
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Interesting factoids about the epic photo that illustrate the scale of the Universe.

05 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 If We Could See the Night Sky With Eyes Like the Hubble T...

Imagine that we could see the night with eyes the size and sensitivity of the Hubble Space Telescope. How paltry then would seem our terrestrial gods, our shabby deities with human faces. How ridiculous our intolerances, how hollow our claims to have privileged access to the mind of God.
Folksonomies: wonder night sky grandeur
Folksonomies: wonder night sky grandeur
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The grandeur of the Universe would let us know our place.

14 DEC 2011 by ideonexus

 Problems with Viewing the Cosmos Through the Atmosphere

The earth's atmosphere is an imperfect window on the universe. Electromagnetic waves in the optical part of the spectrum (that is, waves longer than X rays and shorter than radio waves) penetrate to the surface of the earth only in a few narrow spectral bands. The widest of the transmitted bands corresponds roughly to the colors of visible light; waves in the flanking ultraviolet and infrared regions of the optical spectrum are almost totally absorbed by the atmosphere. In addition, atmospher...
Folksonomies: astronomy atmosphere
Folksonomies: astronomy atmosphere
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An argument for why we needed the Hubble Telescope.