Hubblecast 98: Hubble’s biggest discoveries — part 1

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Since its launch in 1990, Hubble has revolutionised our knowledge of astronomy. From imaging the most stunning phenomena in the cosmos, to the study of the invisible parts of the Universe, to observing the most distant objects ever seen. Hubble’s sharp eye has been at the forefront of astronomical exploration. This new Hubblecast is the first part of an exploration of some of Hubble’s most important discoveries in its almost 27-year history.

Credit:
Directed by: Mathias Jäger
Visual design and editing: Martin Kornmesser
Written by: Tom Barratt, Lauren Fuge, Mathias Jäger
Narration: Sara Mendes da Costa
Images: NASA, ESA/Hubble, M. Kornmesser, HST Frontier Fields team (STScI), HUDF09 Team, HUDF Team, Hubble Deep Field Team (STScI)
Videos: NASA, ESA/Hubble,CLUES - Constrained Local Universe Evolution Simulation
Animations: NASA, ESA/Hubble, M. Kornmesser, L. Calçada, WordlWideTelescope, G. Bacon (STScI)
Web and technical support: Mathias André and Raquel Yumi Shida
Executive producer: Lars Lindberg Christensen
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The Hubble is an amazing instrument, but imagine what we'll eventually learn when the James Webb comes online...

jsal
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So difficult to believe the Hubble Telescope has been in orbit for twenty-seven years! You guys and gals did not say how old our universe is. Anyway, please keep researching and studying the universe, because the answer is out there - somewhere.

darkstormcloud
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there is an omition min 3:33 of what is that object (Quasar) and and why is it appear 4 times (the light deforms in space-time) where is the cientific explanation?!?! the hubble has helped to much for the discoveries but aint the heroe.

pepeyobeck
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Hubble and operational team are great getting great data. like the working Organ, it is good. the problem is the Ogran grinders who are too stupid, come-up with crazy models. MG1

primemagi
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I'm no scientist, but the universe expansion theory confuses me. Galaxies and such speeding away from each other doesn't necessarily mean the universe is expanding. Have these super smart people forgotten what inertia means? An object in motion, stays in motion. I learned that in my Earthly martial arts class. As well as in science class. But that's too simple an explanation for the extremely educated. The universe has always been, A big vacuum of nothing until the singularity happened. Then it blew, sending stuff fying out from that point. Inertia..Not some silly dark stuff pushing it out. Yea, I'm an uneducated nobody, but come on.

deathsgate