There is little atmosphere to hinder Hubble's view.
There is little atmosphere to hinder Hubble's view
because of the Hubble telescope pictures.
you altready can my friend you already can.
It is important because it lets us take pictures from space. Some pictures are from areas we will probably never be able to go to. It also lets us explore the photos and lets us see areas of space we want to know more about.
The Hubble Telescope operates outside of the Earth's atmosphere in space, where it is not affected by atmospheric distortions that can blur images. This allows for clearer and more detailed observations of distant celestial objects. Additionally, being above the atmosphere also provides access to a wider range of wavelengths of light that would be absorbed or scattered by the atmosphere.
''because the people who made it were high and cose they could'' no. it was so that NASA were able to explore outside the milky way galaxy. Hubble let NASA take very precise pictures in space.
Yes, telescopes in space, such as the Hubble Space Telescope, are able to capture extremely clear images of objects in deep space. These telescopes are not affected by the distortion caused by Earth's atmosphere, resulting in sharper and more detailed images compared to ground-based telescopes.
No. Hubble was designed to look at things much farther away. Any pictures it took of the moon would turn out as a blurry white mess. Even pictures of Jupiter are fuzzy. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will be able to, though, as soon as it refines its orbit and gets its high res camera turned on.
Money, it all comes down to money. The Hubble telescope is a multimillion dollar thing, i think its total cost is in the billions. So imagine what a better one would cost! Plus, the Hubble telescope has been able to do everything we needed it to. So until it can't keep up, i think we will keep good old Mr Hubble.
1. The Hubble Telescope travels around the Earth at a speed of 5 miles per second. 2. It was launched on April 24, 1990 from the space shuttle Discovery. 3. The Hubble Telescope should remain in space for 20 years. 4. The optical Hubble Telescope was named after Dr. Edwin P. Hubble. Dr. Hubble was the scientist who confirmed his theory of the expanding universe. This provided the foundation for the BIG Bang Theory. 5. The Hubble Telescope is 43.5 feet long and 14 feet wide. It weighs 24,500 pounds. 6. It cost 1.5 billion dollars. 7. It travels 353 miles above the Earth. 8. The Hubble Telescope transmits about 120 gigabytes of data every week. 9.It receives its energy from the sun through two 25-foot solar panels. 10.The Hubble Telescope is able to lock onto an object that it is photographing.. This allows it to remain steady in order to produce a near-perfect
Hubble used, among others, the 100-inch Hooker telescope at Mount Wilson, which could have easily resolved Pluto. The Yerkes observatory managed to (unknowingly) photograph Pluto with only a 40-inch scope, which has about six times less light-gathering ability.
No. We have so far been able to see to approximately one billion years or a bit less after the Big Bang. The best telescope for this sort of thing is the Hubble telescope. The best images we have seen of the ancient galaxy are called the Hubble Deep Field Images, and they show many, many, galaxies and proto-galaxies, in just a tiny fraction of our night sky.