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Tonight's
Space Chats Features Opening of New Hubble Space Telescope Exhibit
at Goddard (cont'd)
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Visitors
can have an interactive look at galaxies |
Using an infrared
camera, visitors can also learn about the different wavelengths
of light by taking pictures of their hand in visible and infrared
light. Numerous videos will be shown including, Shoemaker-Levy (a
comet collision with Jupiter), Star Life Cycle Animations, Age of
the Universe and the Hubble Deep Field.
"The exhibit
is an outstanding venue for presenting the spectacular images of
the universe and the associated discoveries made with the Hubble
Space Telescope," said James Jeletic, HST Science Operations
Manager at the Goddard Space Flight Center." Even though I
see these images every day, it is inspirational to me when I see
them enlarged and illuminated as they appear in this exhibit. We
are fortunate that people in this area of the country, including
those individuals who devote their careers to operating and enhancing
the Hubble Space Telescope, have an opportunity to share this experience."
Some of the
more famous HST images in the exhibit include the Eagle Nebula and
the Hubble Deep Field that are rendered as large backlit transparencies
(six feet high by 9.5 feet wide). The spiral galaxy NGC 4414 and
a montage of our solar system planets (Mercury excluded) also appear
on their own large backlit transparencies. Other well-known images
such as the Antennae Galaxies, Supernova 1987A, and the comet Shoemaker-Levy
collision with Jupiter appear on various light boxes. There are
also displays of images and data on black holes, gravitational lenses,
star clusters, and more.
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Visitors
can travel through a tunnel of galaxies. |
"The exhibit
magnificently displays and describes the wonders of the night sky
that call for us to explore them," said Kevin Hartnett, a member
of the HST Technical Management Team at Goddard. "It also celebrates
the achievements of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the many individuals
here at Goddard and elsewhere who have labored so hard to make it
the productive scientific observatory that it is."
The exhibit
originally opened at the Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum
in Chicago in June 2000. Other tours have included: Space Center
Houston, Kennedy Space Center in Fla., the Strategic Air Command
Museum in Ashland in Nebraska, and the North Carolina State Museum
of Natural Science in Raleigh. Various versions of the "New
Views of the Universe" exhibit will travel to science museums,
major planetaria, and space centers through 2005.
"Hubble
Space Telescope: New Views of the Universe" has been organized
by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service and
the Space Telescope Science Institute, operated for the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration by the Association of the Universities
for Research in Astronomy, Inc. The exhibition and its educational
programs have been made possible through the generous support of
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Offices of Space
Science and Education in Washington, D.C. and Lockheed Martin, Bethesda,
Md.
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