Mercury,
July/August 2003 Table of Contents

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Image
courtesy of NASA, ESA, and Tom M. Brown (STScI). |
by
Robert Naeye
In
January 1996, Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) director
Robert Williams and several colleagues unveiled the deepest optical
image of all time. The so-called Hubble Deep Field was a tunnel
through time, revealing objects from foreground Milky Way stars
to subgalactic clumps less than 1 billion years after the Big Bang.
Hubble acquired the image over 10 days by "staring" at
a field in Ursa Major the size of a sand grain held at arm's length.
The Deep Field captured objects down to 30th magnitude, about the
brightness of a cigar’s glow on the Moon as seen from Earth.
Now, thanks
to the newly installed Advanced Camera for Surveys, Hubble has taken
an even deeper image. Tom Brown of STScI and colleagues directed
the Space Telescope to image an area in the halo of the Andromeda
Galaxy. With its enhanced sensitivity, the new camera needed only
3.5 days to acquire the image, which shows objects down to 31st
magnitude. That’s 10 billion times fainter than the faintest
stars you can see with your naked eye.
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