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Hubble Space Telescope

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Hubble Space Telescope

Hubble Space Telescope - Click to enlarge Hubble Space Telescope - Click to enlarge Hubble Space Telescope - Click to enlarge Hubble Space Telescope - Click to enlarge
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Space-based astronomical observing facility, orbiting the Earth at an altitude of 610 km/380 mi. It consists of a 2.4 m/94 in telescope and four complementary scientific instruments, is roughly cylindrical, 13 m/43 ft long and 4 m/13 ft in diameter, and has two large solar panels. HST produces a wealth of scientific data, and allows astronomers to observe the birth of stars, find planets around neighbouring stars, follow the expanding remnants of exploding stars, and search for black holes in the centre of galaxies. HST is a cooperative programme between the European Space Agency (ESA) and the US space agency NASA, and is the first spacecraft specifically designed to be serviced in orbit as a permanent space-based observatory. It was launched in 1990. It will re-enter the Earth's atmosphere some time after 2010 and be destroyed unless more servicing missions are flown to it – missions that are currently in doubt following the Columbia shuttle disaster.

By having a large telescope above Earth's atmosphere, astronomers are able to look at the universe with unprecedented clarity. Celestial observations by HST are unhampered by clouds and other atmospheric phenomena that distort and attenuate starlight. In particular, the apparent twinkling of starlight, caused by density fluctuations in the atmosphere, limits the clarity of ground-based telescopes. HST performs at least ten times better than such telescopes and can see almost back to the edge of the universe and to the beginning of time (see Big Bang).

Before HST could reach its full potential, a flaw in the shape of its main mirror, discovered two months after the launch, had to be corrected. In 1993, as part of a planned servicing and instrument upgrade mission, NASA astronauts aboard the space shuttle Endeavour installed a set of corrective lenses to compensate for the error in the mirror figure. COSTAR (corrective optics space telescope axial replacement), a device containing ten coin-sized mirrors, now feeds a corrected image from the main mirror to three of the HST's four scientific instruments. HST is also being used to detail the distribution of dust and stars in nearby galaxies, watch the collisions of galaxies in detail, infer the evolution of galaxies, and measure the age of the universe.

© Research Machines plc 2008. All rights reserved. Helicon Publishing is a division of Research Machines plc.


 
 

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