After a blue dwarf galaxy shot through it like an arrow, the large Bullseye now has nine rings—six more than any other galaxy ...
See composite views of the Cartwheel Galaxy captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. The galaxy is 500 million light years away and has also been imaged by Hubble Space Telescope, comparison shown ...
Why it's so special: This image of a spiral galaxy taken by the Hubble Space Telescope is a portrait more than two decades in the making. Like most full-color images of space objects, it's a ...
New James Webb Space Telescope observations of a star cluster called NGC 346 are shedding light on how, when and where ...
LEDA 1313424, aptly nicknamed the Bullseye, is two and a half times the size of our Milky Way and has nine rings — six more than any other known galaxy. High-resolution imagery from NASA’s Hubble ...
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope had captured a ringed galaxy (LEDA 1313424) that not only heavily resembles a bullseye, but ...
The Bullseye is now confirmed to have nine rings, eight of which are visible to Hubble. Researchers confirmed the existence ...
stands out in the photo as a pale blue dot shining clearly amid thick bands of gas, located just a little down and to the right of the galaxy's milky core. Hubble snapped the image about six weeks ...
The view is also a famous pasttime for stargazers ... by the gravitational pull of a neighboring galaxy, seen in this Hubble Space Telescope image.
"The protostars are midway down the path to becoming mature stars." Two young stars shine bright in the dusty depths of the Orion Nebula in a new Hubble Space Telescope image. Located about 1,300 ...
This Hubble Space Telescope image features the galaxy LEDA 22057 ... The new Hubble photo is not the most famous "pale blue dot" image of all time. That distinction goes to a shot captured ...