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Saturday 6 May 2017

NASA's Hubble telescope captures massive galaxy cluster 6 billion light years away


The Hubble telescope helped show that this arc is composed of two distorted images of an ordinary spiral galaxy that just happens to lie behind the cluster.
NASA's Hubble Telescope has captured a beautiful image of a massive galaxy cluster which is located six billion light years away.
The image shows the extremely faint features which have never been seen before.
Made up of hundreds of galaxies, Abell 370 is located in the constellation Cetus (the Sea Monster). In the mid-1980s high-resolution images of the cluster showed that the giant luminous arc in the lower left of the image was not a curious structure within the cluster, but rather an astrophysical phenomenon – the gravitationally lensed image of a galaxy twice as far away as the cluster itself.
The Hubble telescope, jointly operated by NASA and European Space Agency (ESA), has helped show that this arc is composed of two distorted images of an ordinary spiral galaxy that just happens to lie behind the cluster.
Abell 370’s enormous gravitational influence warps the shape of spacetime around it, causing the light of background galaxies to spread out along multiple paths and appear both distorted and magnified.
The effect can be seen as a series of streaks and arcs curving around the centre of the image.
Massive galaxy clusters can therefore act like natural telescopes, giving astronomers a close-up view of the very distant galaxies behind the cluster – a glimpse of the universe in its infancy, only a few hundred million years after the Big Bang.
The new image of Abell 370 was captured as part of the Frontier Fields programme, which used a whopping 630 hours of Hubble observing time, over 560 orbits of the Earth.
Six clusters of galaxies were imaged in exquisite detail, including Abell 370 which was the very last one to be finished.An earlier image of this object – using less observation time and therefore not recording such faint detail – was published in 2009.
The Frontier Fields programme produced the deepest observations ever made of galaxy clusters and the magnified galaxies behind them.These observations are helping astronomers understand how stars and galaxies emerged out of the dark ages of the universe, when space was dark, opaque, and filled with hydrogen.
Studying massive galaxy clusters like Abell 370 also helps with measuring the distribution of normal matter and dark matter within such clusters.By studying its lensing properties, astronomers have determined that Abell 370 contains two large, separate clumps of dark matter, contributing to the evidence that this massive galaxy cluster is actually the result of two smaller clusters merging together.

2 comments:

  1. For pete's sake, time to look up "The Electric Universe" everyone and become truly informed about one of the biggest lies of all. JP Morgan paid to rewrite text books and tell us the Universe is gravity based just so he could sell copper. Tesla was right, there is limitless energy all around us, and the Universe is Electro-gravitic. No big bang, no "black holes" no "dark matter" it's all B.S. Our "search" for energy has been like a fish looking for water. Check out the "impossible" EM drive that's now possible while you're at it..

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  2. Having seen this "gravitational lensing" effect makes me wonder if there was any acceleration of the light as its path was curved around the galactic cluster. If it was, then the so called "speed limit" which is associated with the speed of light has been violated in nature. This would be similar to the "sling shot" effect which we use for increasing the speed of many of our space probes.

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