You've never stared this deep into space before
You've never stared this deep into space before
This is a picture taken by the Hubble space telescope (click it for bigger version). It's an "extreme deep field" picture. The exposure time is two million seconds (which is 23 days and a few hours). It shows over 5500 galaxies and the most distant objects here are over 13 billion light years away. Also, the faintest star you can see with the naked eye is ten billion times brighter than the faintest galaxies in this picture.
Those are some mind boggling numbers right there.
[lvlshot]http://www.spacetelescope.org/static/archives/images/screen/heic1214a.jpg[/lvlshot]
source
Those are some mind boggling numbers right there.
[lvlshot]http://www.spacetelescope.org/static/archives/images/screen/heic1214a.jpg[/lvlshot]
source
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before

also: It's insane to think about the scale of everything. Some things there are already 13 billion years old. It's too bad all humans don't start their lives with a flythrough tour of the universe so they stop being selfish insane superstitious cunts.
I love quake!
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
we're also a galaxy, wonder who's watching us, besides the goofment.
they running SETI 2.0 ?
they running SETI 2.0 ?
[color=red][WYD][/color]S[color=red]o[/color]M
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Don Carlos
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
It blows my mind that people still refuse to beleive that aliens exist. I don't mean aliens that have come and put things in southern American peoples asses, or spent 8 seconds flying around the sky at warp speed, I am talking about life on another planet in another galaxy. It almost seems impossible for it not to exist given the scale of everything.
Awesome picture by the way dude
Awesome picture by the way dude
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
i hope we find LV 426
[color=red][WYD][/color]S[color=red]o[/color]M
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Cool stuff 
[size=85][color=#0080BF]io chiamo pinguini![/color][/size]
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Isn't this an old photo?
An amazing photo nonetheless...
An amazing photo nonetheless...
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Nope. They've done deep field photo's before with Hubble, but none this deep into space.
- GONNAFISTYA
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Deep Field, Ultra Deep Field, Extreme Deep Field...
Cosmologists and their naming conventions.
Cosmologists and their naming conventions.
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
i'm looking forward to the Ultimate Deep Field, when we'll be able to count the beads of sweat on Shatner's forehead as he wipes out Klingons
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
lol, Über Deep Field
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Don Carlos
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
I vote for Super Hyper Mega Deep Field next
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
getting close to Maximum Depth Field bros.
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
The tension. I can't stand it. Anal collapse imminent 
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
1337 deep field!
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Nah, probably a star that is part of the milky wayMemphis wrote:what's with the lens flare on the lower right? aliens?
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
[lvlshot]http://www.nerdragecomic.com/images/ancientaliens.jpg[/lvlshot]Memphis wrote:what's with the lens flare on the lower right? aliens?Eraser wrote:
[lvlshot]http://[/lvlshot]
This the view that see's almost to the edge of the universe ?, seeing some of the 1st stars/galaxies that were 'born' ?
Pretty epic
[color=red] . : [/color][size=85] You knows you knows [/size]
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Aye, they're more than likely long dead, pretty cool looking at something that was created towards the beginning of time though 
If we get hubble to 'squint' a little, maybe he can see the extra .5 billion years and see there's another level / final bossThe photo is a sequel to the original "Hubble Ultra Deep Field," a picture the Hubble Space Telescope took in 2003 and 2004 that collected light over many hours to reveal thousands of distant galaxies in what was the deepest view of the universe so far. The XDF goes even farther, peering back 13.2 billion years into the universe's past. The universe is thought to be about 13.7 billion years old.
[color=red] . : [/color][size=85] You knows you knows [/size]
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Too bad this isn't in stereo so you could get a better sense of what is where. Still... crazy shit. Also, I thought the universe was only 6000 years old? 
- GONNAFISTYA
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
lol wut?mrd wrote:Too bad this isn't in stereo so you could get a better sense of what is where.
At the distances involved, there'd be no depth separation or parallax in the image at all. The human eye can barely discern depth separation between mountains in the distance...only the haze tells the eye which mountain is further away...let alone galaxies billions of light years away. I doubt the parallax would change at all if you took the photo from both sides of the Earth's orbit around the Sun.
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Or from one side of our galaxy to the other for that matter...
- GONNAFISTYA
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
Pretty much.
We'd just have to wait 100 million years for the second photo.
The parallax they're measuring for these distances are tiny percentages of 1 degree, it'd still be a flat 2D image to the casual observer.
We'd just have to wait 100 million years for the second photo.
The parallax they're measuring for these distances are tiny percentages of 1 degree, it'd still be a flat 2D image to the casual observer.
Last edited by GONNAFISTYA on Thu Sep 27, 2012 12:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
but they could still digitally adjust and exaggerate for the effect ...just to get that "better sense" of the positions.
A few years back, some dude took stereo images of clouds, from cameras that were hundreds of feet away, and he fed the resulting image into a standard size binocular thingie and the result was said to be amazing for those who experienced it.
A few years back, some dude took stereo images of clouds, from cameras that were hundreds of feet away, and he fed the resulting image into a standard size binocular thingie and the result was said to be amazing for those who experienced it.
- GONNAFISTYA
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Re: You've never stared this deep into space before
All I can say to this approach is this: most HDR photography sucks precisely because it exaggerates reality.Tsakali wrote:but they could still digitally adjust and exaggerate for the effect ...just to get that "better sense" of the positions.
A few years back, some dude took stereo images of clouds, from cameras that were hundreds of feet away, and he fed the resulting image into a standard size binocular thingie and the result was said to be amazing for those who experienced it.
It's cool for 5 seconds but you're not teaching anyone anything, you're distorting it. The whole point of the photo is to make you feel humility and awe at the distances achieved, not condense it for the already-narcissistic Big Gulp crowd. Fuck that dude and his binoculars.