According to Wikipedia - it was launched on 25th August 2003 - which was a Monday.
The main advantage of the Hubble Space Telescope is its ability to capture high-resolution images of celestial objects in visible, ultraviolet, and near-infrared light. This has led to numerous scientific discoveries and advancements in our understanding of the universe.
The main advantage would be the absence of an atmosphere. Any telescope on earth can only "see" electromagnetic (light) waves after they have travelled through the atmosphere, losing some of their directional integrity, which distorts the image seen in earth bound telescopes. Some light waves never make it to the telescope at all.
refriacting telescope
An optical telescope cannot be used during cloudy days. Of course, this assumes that the telescope is located somewhere on the Earth's surface and therefore subject to weather. Since clouds obscure the sky - and any heavenly object otherwise visible - the optical telescope will be unable to see anything. A radio telescope, however, can see through clouds, simply because clouds do not block or cause significant interference to radiowaves reaching the Earth's surface from space.
First, they have a major advantage, and that is that they have a much clearer image, due to the lack of atmosphere.The disadvantages are mainly related to the high cost of putting the telescope up into space, and maintaining it (you can't just walk over to repair something). For this reason, other alternatives are also used, or considered, such as telescopes on Earth that compensate the atmosphere with a larger size, or advanced adaptive optics, or even telescopes carried on airplanes at a high altitude!
The Hubble Space Telescope or HST was launched aboard the space shuttle Dscovery during mission STS-31 on the 24th of April 1990.
The main advantage of the Hubble Space Telescope is its ability to capture high-resolution images of celestial objects in visible, ultraviolet, and near-infrared light. This has led to numerous scientific discoveries and advancements in our understanding of the universe.
Hubble was launched 24 April 1990, at 8:33:51 EDT and achieved orbit that day. As of 24 February 2014, Hubble has been orbiting 23 years 10 months 1 day.
No because it should be a clear day, and the fear of lightning striking is always there.
NASA uses Kennedy space center for their b;ast zone. on the day of a launch of any kinda is happing they claose the park for the day. only the people that got tickts in advance can eneter the park on the day of a launch
It is possible to see a space shuttle launch from Miami, which is about 200 miles away from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral. However, visibility may depend on weather conditions and the specific trajectory of the launch.
Apollo 13 launched from Kennedy Space Center on April 11, 1970.
Astronaut training takes years before an individual is selected for a particular mission. Astronauts prepare for that launch day with a series of medical tests to ensure they are healthy for the launch and are expected to stay healthy through the mission. They then begin to acclimate themselves to a new time schedule based on launch time. They spend the final day or two at the Kennedy Space Center in simple crew quarters and have a meal together before suiting up several hours before launch.
Apollo 7 was an 11-day Earth-orbital mission, the first manned launch of the Saturn IB launch vehicle, and the first three-person US space mission.
No. There has never been a double space shuttle launch. The closest NASA ever came to this was scheduled for May of 1986 when 2 planetary probes were to be launched from shuttles in the same week. However, NASA has had 2 space shuttles out on the launch pads at the same time several times. First in late 1985/early 1986, and the last in 2009.
Yes, the space shuttle launch can be visible from Tampa, Florida, which is approximately 200 miles away from the Kennedy Space Center where the launches occur. Depending on weather conditions and time of day, observers may be able to see the shuttle launch as a bright streak in the sky.
The main advantage would be the absence of an atmosphere. Any telescope on earth can only "see" electromagnetic (light) waves after they have travelled through the atmosphere, losing some of their directional integrity, which distorts the image seen in earth bound telescopes. Some light waves never make it to the telescope at all.