Hubble Revisited New Images from the Discovery Machine
Arguably the single most successful scientific instrument ever built, the Hubble Space telescope continues to dazzle. In recent months it has discovered the most distant known galaxy and the most massive known star, and has been at the front lines of all the most pressing questions in astrophysics:...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
New York, NY
Springer New York
1998, 1998
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Edition: | 1st ed. 1998 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | |
Collection: | Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Telescopes on the Ground and in Space
- Telescopes in Orbit and NewTelescopes on Mountaintops
- The Long Road to Hubble’s Launch
- In Orbit
- The First Servicing Mission
- The Second Servicing Mission
- 2. To the Edge of the Universe
- The Basic Questions of Cosmology
- A View into the Depths of Spaceand Time: The Hubble Deep Field
- The Search for Cosmic Numbers
- Searching for the Building Blocks of Galaxies
- Colliding Galaxies
- Quasars: Beacons at the Beginning of Time
- Active Galaxies: Nearby Mini-Quasars
- Gravitational Lenses: Hubble’s Telephoto Lens
- Cosmic Gamma Ray Bursts
- 3. Stars
- Stellar Nurseries
- Giant Stars
- Globular Clusters, White Dwarfs, and Blue Stragglers
- Still Going Strong: Supernova 1987A
- Neutron Stars
- A Festival of Colors and Shapes
- Old Couples
- 4. Planets
- Planets around Other Stars
- At the Edge of the Solar System: Pluto and Trans-Neptunian Objects
- Neptune and Uranus
- Saturn
- Jupiter’s Aurorae
- Jupiter’s Moons
- Asteroids
- Comets
- Mars
- 5. Hubble’s Future and ItsSuccessors
- Hubble’s Second Decade
- The Next Two Shuttle Visits
- Hubble’s Legacy: The Data Archive
- Hubble’s Successors
- Europe as Partner
- 6. Appendix
- Want to See More? (World WideWeb Addresses)
- Further Reading