To the edge of the observable universe. The farthest object imaged so far was the cluster of galaxies Abell 2218 at a distance of 13.7 billion light years.
The Hubble Space Telescope can see out to a distance of several billions of light-years.
To view things from far away is called a binocular
The Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990 into space to take pictures the Earth and to relay them back to its ground crew. See the official Hubble Space Telescope website: http://hubblesite.org/ ~ Hexedgirl92
They found out what the stars are made of and they also got to see billions of light years away which was never possible.
-Because it was the fist telescope that can see outside our solar system.
The Hubble Space Telescope can see out to a distance of several billions of light-years.
To view things from far away is called a binocular
the hubble telescope edwin hubble :)
So that man can and see and study the stars in away not possible from earth.
Telescopes are used to see things that are far away from earth. Using telescopes we can see things that are millions of miles away. Most of the telescopes are on Earth but some of them are in space such as the Hubble Space Telescope.
On January 26th, 2011, The Hubble Telescope took a picture 17 lightyears away!
That number is in the neighborhood of 132,360,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 . (rounded to the nearest sextillion meters)
IT IS NOT POSSIBLE WITH ANY TELESCOPE, EVEN THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE ! http://www.rocketroberts.com/astro/flag_on_moon.htm Go to that link for a detailed, scientific answer as to why we cannot see it. The simple answer is we are way too far away !...........I'm sorry, but I am an astronomy major and the statement that we could not even see it with the hubble telescope is completely untrue. However, the answer is NO, you cannot see it from Earth, even with a powerfull telescope.
it can see further.
The answer is TELESCOPE because the word roots of telescope are ¨far away¨ and ¨see.¨
the farthest the hubble telescope can see is about 150 million light years away!
Yes