Hubble Deep Field was created in 1995.
Hubble Deep Field South was created in 1998.
The Hubble Telescope was named after its designer Edwin Hubble.
The Hubble telescope has made numerous groundbreaking discoveries, including determining the rate of expansion of the universe, discovering new exoplanets, capturing images of distant galaxies, and providing evidence for the existence of dark matter.
The Hubble Telescope is named after astronomer Edwin Hubble, who made significant contributions to the field of observational cosmology. Edwin Hubble's discoveries revolutionized our understanding of the universe, which is why the telescope was named in his honor.
The Hubble Deep Field is part of "The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey". Basically it spent days exposing a close up image of the space between a few stars that we can see from earth. It turns out that when you zoom in on that "empty space" between the stars in our earth's sky - there are actually thousands of galaxies.The light is too far to really be visible without this special equipment. So what? Well, when you find a clear area and you think you can "see all the stars" - you're barely getting a taste of what's out there. Your eyes are only showing you a couple of the nearest stars.
Hubble Deep Field South was created in 1998.
Hubble Ultra-Deep Field was created in 2004.
1 inch
it is 1 mile long
The furthest Hubble as ever gazed into the universe is the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. Search that in google and check it out.
The Deep Field was created in 2010.
Chandra Deep Field South was created in 2001.
Deep Bay Marine Field Station was created in 2011.
There are at least 3000 galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North (with billions of stars, planets, and moons in each one; as well as asteroids and nebulae). Their light has taken 13 billion years to reach Earth.
The point of the Hubble Deep Field observations is that scientists pointed the Hubble Space Telescope toward a dark patch of the sky where there were no known stars or galaxies. Everything observed in those photos had been entirely unknown before the images were obtained. So, nothing there has a "name"; by now, it probably has an index number in some database. But not a "name".
Yes, and better than ever. Google "Hubble Ultra Deep Field" for some of the most amazing pictures you will ever see. Thousands upon thousands of galaxies.
NASA's Hubble Deep Space Telescope was named after the man who invented it.