NASA snaps color portrait of the cosmos

Originally published June 5, 2014 at 7:36 AM | Page modified June 5, 2014 at 7:51 AM




NASA/ESA


WASHINGTON -


The Hubble Space Telescope has captured our cosmos at its most colorful.


A new NASA panorama looking deep and far into the universe for the first time includes ultraviolet light, which is normally not visible to the human eye. It shows up in the photo as bright baby blue with spinning galaxies, which are about 5 to 10 billion years old, not too old or young in cosmic terms.


The photo is a composite of more than 800 photos taken by Hubble and shows about 10,000 multi-colored galaxies.


Hubble astronomer Zolt Levay (zohlt lih-VAY') said by adding ultraviolet and infrared to the pictures, people can now see the universe in the broad spectrum of color 'and then some.'


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Entities 0 Name: Hubble Space Telescope Count: 1 1 Name: Zolt Levay Count: 1 2 Name: NASA Count: 1 3 Name: WASHINGTON Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1xcOPoi Title: Most Colorful View of Universe Captured by Hubble Space Telescope Description: A new NASA panorama looking deep and far into the universe for the first time includes ultraviolet light, which is normally not visible to the human eye.

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