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1997
Images
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1997
Spacepics: Please note that images are chronicled by date - most
recent listed first.
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(169 KB JPEG)
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HUBBLE
WITNESSES THE FINAL BLAZE OF GLORY OF SUN-LIKE STARS
The
end of a sun-like star's life was once thought to be simple: the
star gracefully casting off a shell of glowing gas and then settling
into a long retirement as a burned-out white dwarf.
Now,
a dazzling collection of detailed views released today by several
teams of astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope reveals
surprisingly intricate glowing patterns spun into space by aging
stars: pinwheels, lawn sprinkler style jets, elegant goblet shapes,
and even some that look like a rocket engine's exhaust.
Release
97-183
97-183.txt
(text only)
Images also are available at:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/38.html
and via links in http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html
17
December 1997
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(JPEG 3.3MB)
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SPACE
PHYSICISTS FIND THE ENERGY THAT POWERS EXPLOSIVE CORONAL MASS EJECTIONS
AND DISCOVER SIGNATURES OF THEIR ORIGIN AND IMPACT
Using
spacecraft and supercomputers, scientists from the International
Solar Terrestrial Physics (ISTP) program have developed a new theory
for the explosive, high velocity coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that
will erupt from the Sun with increasing frequency during the maximum
of the new solar cycle. CMEs are eruptions of electrically charged
gas from the Sun that can trigger magnetic storms around Earth.
Such storms occasionally disturb spacecraft, navigation and communications
systems, and electric power grids.
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-169
nformation about ISTP and the physics of the Sun and Earth may be
found at URL: http://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/istp/outreach/frontpage.html
08
December 1997
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(146 KB JPEG)
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ONE
STAR'S LOSS IS ANOTHER'S GAIN: HUBBLE CAPTURES BRIEF MOMENT IN LIFE
OF LIVELY DUO
Some stars in double-star systems have found a quick way to lose
weight by dumping their extra pounds onto their companions. Astronomers
using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered such a case
in the double-star system Phi Persei. A "rapid diet" program
has trimmed an aging, once massive star to a lean one-solar mass,
while the once mild-mannered, moderate-sized companion has bulked
up to a hefty nine-solar masses and is spinning so violently that
it's flinging gas from its surface. This observation has allowed
astronomers to catch a glimpse of an unusual, fleeting moment in
the life of a massive star in a double-star system.
Release
97-174
A photo and caption are available via the World Wide Web at http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/39.html
and via links in http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html
.
Images
are available at http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/gif/phiper.gif
(GIF) and http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/phiper.jpg
(JPEG).
Image
files also may be accessed via anonymous ftp from oposite.stsci.edu
in /pubinfo:gif/phiper.gif (GIF) and jpeg/phiper.jpg (JPEG).
Higher
resolution digital versions (300 dpi JPEG) of the release photograph
are available in /pubinfo/hrtemp: 97-39.jpg (color) and 97-39bw.jpg
(black & white).
04
December 1997
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(79 KB JPEG)

(688 KB JPEG)
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SOLAR
MYSTERY NEARS SOLUTION WITH DATA FROM SOHO SPACECRAFT
A
likely solution to one of the major mysteries of the Sun has emerged
from recent observations with the European Space Agency/NASA Solar
and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission.
The
new findings seem to account for a substantial part of the energy
needed to cause the very high temperature of the corona, the outermost
layer of the Sun's atmosphere. Since the corona's temperature was
first measured 55 years ago, scientists have lacked a satisfactory
explanation for why that temperature is three million degrees while
the visible surface of the Sun is only 11,000 degrees Fahrenheit
or about 6,000 degrees Celsius.
Release
97-147
Text
Only link Release 97-147
Release
97-143P
Release
97-144P
Information
about the SOHO spacecraft and its observations may be found at URL:
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/
05
November 1997
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(92
KB JPEG)
Caption
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Hubble
Provides Infrared View Of Moon, Ring, And Clouds
Probing
Jupiter's atmosphere for the first time, the Hubble Space Telescope's
new Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS)
provides a sharp glimpse of the planet's ring, moon, and high-altitude
clouds.
For
more detail check this link:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/37.html
November
20, 1997
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(JPEG 147 KB)
Blue Stragglers in Globular Cluster 47 Tucanae.
Caption
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HUBBLE
CATCHES UP WITH A BLUE STRAGGLER STAR
This
image is a 3-color composite of archival Hubble Wide Field and Planetary
Camera 2 images in the ultraviolet (blue), blue (green), and violet
(red) filters. Color tables were assigned and scaled so that the
red giant stars appear orange, main-sequence stars are white/green,
and blue stragglers are appropriately blue.
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-145
Text
Only link Release 97-145
Photos
and captions can be found at:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/35.html
and via links in http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html
Images
are available via the World Wide Web at URL:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/gif/bss19.gif
(GIF), http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/bss19.jpg
(JPEG).
Image
files also may be accessed via anonymous ftp from oposite.stsci.edu
in /pubinfo: gif/bss19.gif (GIF) and jpeg/bss19.jpg (JPEG). Higher
resolution digital versions (300 dpi JPEG) of the release photograph
are available in /pubinfo/hrtemp: 97-35.jpg (color) and 97-35bw.jpg
(black & white). Full resolution TIFF images are available in
/pubinfo/tiff/1997/35a.tif and 35b.tif.
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(JPEG 76 KB)
Colliding Galaxies NGC 4038 and NGC 4039 Detail
Caption
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CLOSE-UP
OF STAR FORMATION IN ANTENNAE GALAXY
These
four close-up views are taken from a head-on collision between two
spiral galaxies, called the Antennae galaxies, seen at image center.
The scale bar at the top of each image is 1,500 light-years across.
[Left
images]
The
collision triggers the birth of new stars in brilliant blue star
clusters, the brightest of which contains roughly a million stars.
The star clusters are blue because they are very young, the youngest
being only a few million years old, a mere blink of the eye on the
astronomical time scale.
[Right
images]
These
close-up views of the cores of each galaxy show entrapped dust and
gas funneled into the center. The nucleus of NGC 4038 (lower right)
is obscured by dust which dims and reddens starlight by scattering
the shorter, bluer wavelengths. This is also the reason the young
star clusters in the dusty regions appear red instead of blue.
This
natural-color image is a composite of four separately filtered images
taken with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), on January
20, 1996. Resolution is 15 light-years per pixel (picture element).
For
more detail check this link:
Release
97-136
Release
97-138P
Credit: Brad Whitmore (STScI), and NASA
A
photo and caption are available via the World Wide Web at
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/34.html
and via links in
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html.
Images are available via the World Wide Web at
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/gif/n40389d.gif
(GIF),
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/n40389d.jpg
(JPEG)
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(JPEG 63 KB)
Colliding Galaxies NGC 4038 and NGC 4039
Caption
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HUBBLE
REVEALS STELLAR FIREWORKS ACCOMPANYING GALAXY COLLISION
This
Hubble Space Telescope image provides a detailed look at a brilliant
"fireworks show" at the center of a collision between
two galaxies. Hubble has uncovered over 1,000 bright, young star
clusters bursting to life as a result of the head-on wreck.
[Left]
A
ground-based telescopic view of the Antennae galaxies (known formally
as NGC 4038/4039) - so named because a pair of long tails of luminous
matter, formed by the gravitational tidal forces of their encounter,
resembles an insect's antennae. The galaxies are located 63 million
light-years away in the southern constellation Corvus.
[Right]
The
respective cores of the twin galaxies are the orange blobs, left
and right of image center, crisscrossed by filaments of dark dust.
A wide band of chaotic dust, called the overlap region, stretches
between the cores of the two galaxies. The sweeping spiral- like
patterns, traced by bright blue star clusters, shows the result
of a firestorm of star birth activity which was triggered by the
collision.
For
more detail check this link:
Release
97-136
Release
97-137P
Credit: Brad Whitmore (STScI), and NASA
A
photo and caption are available via the World Wide Web at
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/34.html
and via links in
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html.
Images are available via the World Wide Web at
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/gif/n40389w.gif,
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/n40389w.jpg
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JPEG (84 KB)
Most Luminous Star Known
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HUBBLE
IDENTIFIES WHAT MAY BE THE MOST LUMINOUS STAR KNOWN
Astronomers
using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have identified what may be
the most luminous star known -- a celestial mammoth which releases
up to 10 million times the power of the Sun and is big enough to
fill the diameter of Earth's orbit. The star unleashes as much energy
in six seconds as our Sun does in one year.
The image, taken by a University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)-led
team with the recently installed Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object
Spectrometer (NICMOS) aboard Hubble, also reveals a bright nebula,
created by extremely massive stellar eruptions. The nebula is so
big (four light-years) that it would nearly span the distance from
the Sun to Alpha Centauri, the nearest star to Earth's solar system.
Caption
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JPEG (22 KB)
Slowest Known Pulsar |
SLOWEST
KNOWN PULSAR REPORTED
This
image of supernova remnant Kes 73 was taken on March 16 - 17, 1992
using the High Resolution Imager instrument on board the German
ROSAT
spacecraft. It is the remains of a star that was destroyed in a
cataclysmic
explosion known as a supernova approximately 2,000 years ago.
Caption
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JPEG (88 KB)
Nuetron Star |
HUBBLE
SEES A NEUTRON STAR ALONE IN SPACE
This is the first direct look, in visible light, at a lone neutron
star, as seen by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The Hubble results
show the star is very hot (1.2 million degrees Fahrenheit at the surface),
and can be no larger than 16.8 miles (28 kilometers) across. These
results prove that the object must be a neutron star, because no other
known type of object can be this hot, small, and dim (below 25th magnitude).
The
first clue that there was a neutron star at this location came in
1992, when the ROSAT (the Roentgen Satellite) found a bright X-ray
source without any optical counterpart in optical sky surveys. Hubble's
Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 was used in October 1996 to undertake
a sensitive search for the optical object, and found a stellar pinpoint
of light within only 2 arc seconds (1/900th the diameter of the
Moon) of the X-ray position. Astronomers haven't directly measured
the neutron star's distance, but fortunately the neutron star lies
in front of a molecular cloud known to be about 400 light-years
away in the southern constellation Corona Australis.
Credit:
Fred Walter (State University of New York at Stony Brook), and NASA
24
September 1997
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JPEG (53 KB)
GIF (84 KB)
Mars on Sept. 12
Caption |
[RIGHT]
This NASA Hubble Space Telescope picture of Mars was taken on Sept.
12, one day after the arrival of the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft
and only five hours before the beginning of autumn in the Martian
northern hemisphere. (Mars is tilted on its axis like Earth, so it
has similar seasonal changes, including an autumnal equinox when the
Sun crosses Mars' equator from the northern to the southern hemisphere).
[LEFT]
An image of this region of Mars, taken in June 1997, is shown for
comparison. The Hellas basin is filled with bright clouds and/or
surface frost. More water ice clouds are visible across the planet
than in the Sept. image, reflecting the effects of the changing
season. Mars appears larger because it was 44 million miles (77
million kilometers) closer to Earth than in the September image.
Credit: Phil James (Univ. Toledo) and Steve Lee (Univ. Colorado),
and NASA
Other
links:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/gif/mars0609.gif
(GIF),
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/mars0609.jpg
(JPEG)
and via links in: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/31.html
September
17, 1997
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GIF
(214 KB)
Fading Gamma-Ray Burst Fireball |
HUBBLE
STAYS ON TRAIL OF FADING GAMMA-RAY BURST FIREBALL, RESULTS POINT TO
EXTRAGALACTIC ORIGIN
New Hubble Space Telescope observations of the ever-fading fireball
from one of the universe's most mysterious phenomena -- a gamma-ray
burst -- is reinforcing the emerging view that these titanic explosions
happen far away in other galaxies, and so are among the most spectacularly
energetic events in the universe.
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-123
Images
to accompany this release are available electronically through the
World Wide Web through links at http://www.stsci.edu
or directly at URL: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/97/30.html
and via links at URLs: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/latest.html
or http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html.
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr.html
Image
files also may be accessed via anonymous ftp from oposite.stsci.edu
in /pubinfo: gif/grb0228b.gif (GIF) and jpeg/grb0228b.jpg (JPEG).
September
16, 1997
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(JPEG 20 KB)
Lunar Prospector |
Launch
of NASA's Lunar Prospector mission to explore the Moon has been rescheduled
from late September to Nov. 23, 1997.
September
10, 1997
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(JPEG 25 KB)
ACE Artist Rendition |
ACE
Artist Rendition
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-119
Release
97-157
ACE Project
website
September
5, 1997
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Release
97-114P
Solar Rotation Rate with Depth
(Hi-Res image ) |
SOLAR
ROTATION RATE WITH DEPTH:
This image, taken using the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) instrument
on board the NASA/ESA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft,
shows differences in the rotation speed of solar material. This image
is made from continuous observations over a period of twelve months
beginning in May 1996. The false colors represent speed; red material
is rotating the fastest, dark blue, the slowest. The left side of
the figure is rotation speed at the surface of the Sun; red material
at the equator is moving approximately three thousand miles per hour
faster than the blue material at the poles. The cutaway on the right
reveals rotation speed inside the Sun. The large dark red band is
a massive fast flow of hot, electrically charged gas called plasma
beneath the solar equator. This plasma stream is approximately 300
thousand miles wide and 130 thousand miles deep. This material moves
about four percent faster than the surrounding material. Additionally,
the newly discovered, but much more subtle, plasma streams can be
seen in the cutaway at the poles. They are the light blue areas embedded
in the slower moving dark blue regions. Although much smaller than
the equatorial stream, they are still immense by terrestrial standards.
Each stream is about 17,000 miles across, large enough to engulf two
Earths. This material moves about ten percent faster than its surroundings.
(Photo Credit: Stanford University)
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-117 and the SOHO Homepage
28
August 1997
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Release
97-115P
Variations in Solar Motion Image
(Hi-Res image 329K) |
VARIATIONS
IN SOLAR MOTION IMAGE:
This image is taken using the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) instrument
on the NASA/ESA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft.
It is a result of computations using observations taken continuously
from May 1996 to May 1997. This false color image represents the difference
in speeds between various areas on the Sun, both at the surface and
in the interior. Red and yellow is faster than average and blue is
slower than average. On the left side of the image, the light orange
bands are zones that are moving slightly faster than their surroundings.
The new SOHO observations indicate that these zones extend down approximately
12,000 miles into the Sun. Sunspots, caused by disturbances in the
solar magnetic field, tend to form at the edge of these bands. Scientists
from the Stanford University (California) Solar Oscillations Investigation
(SOI) group speculate that this may be due to the difference in speed
at the edge of these zones that tend to "twist" the magnetic
field generated by the moving hot, electrically charged gas called
plasma. The cutaway on the right side of the image reveals speed variations
in the interior of the Sun. Only the outer 30 percent of the Sun's
interior where the variations are more certain is shown. The red ovals
embedded in the green areas at the poles are the newly discovered
polar plasma "jet streams". They move approximately ten
percent faster than their surroundings, and each is about 17,000 miles
across, large enough to engulf two Earths.
(Photo Credit: Stanford University)
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-117 and the SOHO Homepage
28
August 1997
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Release
97-116P
Polar Flows Image
(Hi-Res image 164K) |
POLAR
FLOWS IMAGE:
This image is a graphical representation of the surface flow from
the equator to the poles of the Sun. The flow lines overlay an image
of the rotation speed at the Sun's surface, taken using the Michelson
Doppler Imager (MDI) instrument on the NASA/ESA Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft over a period of 12 months ending June
1997. The false colors represent speed; red material is rotating faster
than the blue material. As this material rotates, it is also flowing
toward the poles at a relatively slow velocity of about 50 miles per
hour. The lines represent how this motion would appear if you could
stand on the surface of the Sun about 30 degrees from the equator,
and move with the same speed as the material there. If you were at
this position in the northern hemisphere, material closer to the equator
would appear to move to the right of the image as it flowed north,
because it is rotating faster. Material closer to the north pole would
appear to move to the left as it flowed north, because it is rotating
slower. The cutaway on the left of the image represents the observed
polar flow 15 thousand miles beneath the surface and a hypothetical,
slower moving return flow from the poles to the equator, estimated
to be 120 thousand miles beneath the surface.
(Photo Credit: Stanford University)
For
more details check these links:
Release
97-117 and the SOHO Homepage
28
August 1997
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BATSE All Sky Map
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BATSE
All Sky Map:
This image was compiled from observations using the Burst and Transient
Source Experiment (BATSE) instrument on board NASA's Compton Gamma
Ray Observatory (CGRO) spacecraft. One of BATSE's primary objectives
is to study the mysterious phenomenon of gamma ray bursts, which are
brief flashes of extremely high energy light, known as gamma-rays.
This image illustrates the locations of 1000 gamma-ray bursts detected
by the BATSE instrument from April 1991 through May 1994. Each burst
lasts from fractions of a second to minutes. They appear to the BATSE
detectors to pop off like flash bulbs at unexpected times from unexpected
directions, flickering and then fading after briefly dominating the
gamma-ray sky. These mysterious events have puzzled astrophysicists
as to their origin and nature since they were first detected by defense
satellites in the 1960's. Recently, evidence from an Italian satellite
BeppoSAX, followed up by observations in lower energy light from observatories
on the ground and in space, indicate that their origin is remote,
far beyond our Milky Way Galaxy. If this is so, these events are the
most powerful explosions known. During their brief lifetimes of a
few minutes or so, the energy carried by the gamma-rays from these
bursts is equivalent to a year's output by an entire galaxy, consisting
of a hundred billion stars.
September
1997
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We
are interested in what you think, so please send us your comments.
Curator:
Lynn Jenner
Author:
Darlene A.
Ahalt
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