The furthest Hubble as ever gazed into the universe is the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. Search that in Google and check it out.
Yes, it's the most distant dwarf galaxy 13.1 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. MDC2010 1721 in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field).
Yes, it's the most distant spiral galaxy 13 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. SB-WF 1510-1270 in the Hubble Deep Field South).
Yes, it's the most distant lenticular galaxy 13 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. BBG 3179 (a.k.a. HUDF-JD2) in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field).
The basic idea of Hubble's Law is that galaxies (or galaxy clusters) that are farther away move away from us faster than those that are closer to us.The most distant galaxy yet found is a protogalaxy with the designation UDFj-39546284, with a redshift z = 11.9, about 13.42 billion light-years distant from the Milky Way.In case you are asking for the most distant CLUSTER of galaxies, and not the most distant astronomical galaxy, the answer would be the cluster (or protocluster, science is not yet sure about the nature of this structure) which denomination is BoRG-58 , with a redshift z≅8, and about 12 billion light-years distant from us.
Edwin Powell Hubble (November 20, 1889 - September 28, 1953) was an American astronomer who studied the most distant objects visible at the time and contributed to our understanding that the galaxy is expanding.
The Andromedia.
I do not believe that the Hubble is equipped for radio astronomy. Certainly it can "detect" radio waves; it is remote-controlled by radio. But most radio astronomy is done with earth-based dish antennas.
Yes, it's the most distant dwarf galaxy 13.2 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. PCB2012 3020 in the MACS J1149+2223 galaxy cluster).
Yes, it's the most distant dwarf galaxy 13.3 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. CZC2013 MACS0647-JD1 in the MACS J0647+7015 galaxy cluster).
Yes, it's the most distant spiral galaxy 10.7 billion light-years from Earth (i.e. BX442 in the Pegasus constellation).
Bright, distant, powerful, energetic, at the center of the galaxy.
The Radio Telescope