Download great quality Hubble photographs, page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 3 times
Topic started on 12-4-2008 @ 10:08 PM by LateApexer313
Hi All,

I am sure that a lot of you already know this but for those of you who don't you can actually download Hubble pictures from our galaxy and photos of gorgeous nebulae and all types of galaxies as well. Some of you asked where I got my background and so I figured a lot of you would love to go and look at all the photos.

This photo in my background came from the Hubble site, it's an infrared photo of Saturn.

Here's the link to the photo gallery, so please enjoy

hubblesite.org...
Edit to add a P.S.

Even if you don't want to download them, they are spectacular to just browse through...I showed them to some friends who aren't necessarily into this sort of thing and they were stunned at the beauty of the photos so they are worth just looking through even if you're not into space exploration.

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reply posted on 12-4-2008 @ 10:15 PM by Rilence
reply to post by LateApexer313



Thanks for the link, LA...And welcome to ATS

Its nice to have a link that is the start page of the site so you don't end up having to backtrack from some other directory

Cheers


reply posted on 13-4-2008 @ 04:58 AM by LateApexer313
Because I realize how time constraints are on all of us due to real life, and because I think that some of you will just prefer to browse some of these awesome photographs in the simplest means available...

I chose some of my personal favorites so you can just click on these links then go about your ATS business

Title: 3 Moons Cast Shadows on Jupiter
hubblesite.org...

Mars Storm Brews

hubblesite.org...

The Majestic Sombrero Galaxy

hubblesite.org...

Gas pillars in the Eagle Nebula

hubblesite.org...

Ok, that's all the promoting I am going to do of these awesome photographs Like I said, enjoy...hope this entices some of you who might not bother to go to my link, to actually go to the link and look at the photographs

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reply posted on 13-4-2008 @ 06:42 AM by LateApexer313
reply to post by grover



Thanks Grover for the link, glad you enjoyed the Hubble photos.

Love your Yeats quotes too....

"That twenty centuries of stony sleep
were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born? "

One of my all time favorite poems...
Thanks for posting

[edit on 13-4-2008 by LateApexer313]


reply posted on 13-4-2008 @ 03:02 PM by hsur2112
Hi LA. Great thread. I love this site. Such stunning pics. Hubble has been the greatest tool in understanding the universe. I'll never forget the clarity of M100 after the 1st repair mission:





If anyone is interested, you can enter your email addres on the Hubble site
here and receive instant Hubble images, news, etc.


Also worth noting is the August, 2008 service mission (SM4).

SM4 has an ambitious program of activities and three main objectives.

The first objective is to extend Hubble's operational life by at least five years. Over a series of five spacewalks, astronauts will replace all six gyroscopes, install new batteries, and exchange a degraded Fine Guidance Sensor with a new one. They will also install replacement thermal insulation on critical component bays of the telescope, and attach a mechanism that will aid in Hubble's final de-orbiting.

The second objective is to enhance Hubble's scientific power. Astronauts will install two new instruments, the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) and the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS). WFC3, which sees in visible, infrared and ultraviolet light, will improve Hubble's sensitivity 10-30 times because of improvements in technology and design that have occurred since the last instruments were installed.

The third objective is to repair Hubble's out-of-commission instruments, the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) and the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). STIS stopped working in 2004 and ACS failed in 2007.

If these objectives can be successfully carried out during the servicing mission, then Hubble will be at the apex of its scientific capability, with six working, complementary science instruments. These upgrades will keep Hubble functioning at the pinnacle of astronomy well into the next decade.


~source~

Lots and lots to look forward to.


reply posted on 18-5-2008 @ 11:06 PM by LateApexer313
reply to post by SystemiK



LOL I hear that! I have some of the good ones framed and on the wall here in my study

I keep adding more, soon I will be the crazy "Hubble chic" with every inch of wall space in here covered
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