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Among a "field of galaxies;" the James Webb Space Telescope captured spiral galaxy LEDA 2046648, a billion light-years from Earth in the Hercules constellation.
Galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, known as Webb’s First Deep Field. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO . It’s one of the deepest images of our universe that has ever been taken.
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope looked at the same distant patch of sky that Hubble did, revealing yet more detail in the famous Ultra Deep Field.
The new image, called Webb's First Deep Field, represents the deepest infrared image of the universe ever taken. It shows a galaxy cluster known as SMACS 0723, located over 5 billion light years ...
The focal point of Webb's deep field image is a large, bright cluster of galaxies known as SMACS 0723, which sits about 4.6 billion light-years from Earth — meaning the light we see here was ...
The focal point of Webb's deep field image is a large, bright cluster of galaxies known as SMACS 0723, which sits about 4.6 billion light-years from Earth — meaning the light we see here was ...
The James Webb Space Telescope detected about 25,000 galaxies in a single snapshot, dramatically surpassing the nearly 10,000 shown in the Hubble Space Telescope's Ultra Deep Field Survey ...
I was reminded of this analogue exercise when NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope shared the first deep field images. The public expression of wonder is not unlike that of my students in the darkroom.
For Webb’s first deep field image, it took data using six filters, each of which produces a black-and-white image. Each filter was used for a two-hour exposure, adding up to a total of 12 hours ...
Today the White House and NASA debuted the first color image from the James Webb Space Telescope. In the video, check out some of the amazing things we can see from this photo looking 4.6 billion y… ...