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January 10, 2025

Hubble rings in the new year with image of constellation Hydra

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image holds an array of stars and galaxies. Credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA, and D. Erb
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This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image holds an array of stars and galaxies. Credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA, and D. Erb

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image reveals a tiny patch of sky in the constellation Hydra. The stars and galaxies depicted here span a mind-bending range of distances. The objects in this image that are nearest to us are stars within our own Milky Way galaxy.

You can easily spot these stars by their diffraction spikes, lines that radiate from bright light sources, like , as a result of how that light interacts with Hubble's secondary mirror supports. The bright star that sits just at the edge of the prominent bluish galaxy is only 3,230 light-years away, as measured by ESA's Gaia space observatory.

Behind this star is a galaxy named LEDA 803211. At 622 million light-years distant, this galaxy is close enough that its bright galactic nucleus is clearly visible, as are numerous star clusters scattered around its patchy disk. Many of the more distant in this frame appear star-like, with no discernible structure, but without the diffraction spikes of a star in our galaxy.

Of all the galaxies in this frame, one pair stands out: a smooth golden galaxy encircled by a nearly complete ring in the upper-right corner of the image. This curious configuration is the result of gravitational lensing that warps and magnifies the of distant objects. Einstein predicted the curving of spacetime by matter in his , and galaxies seemingly stretched into rings like the one in this image are called Einstein rings.

The lensed galaxy, whose image we see as the , lies incredibly far away from Earth: we are seeing it as it was when the universe was just 2.5 billion years old. The galaxy acting as the gravitational lens itself is likely much closer. A nearly perfect alignment of the two galaxies is necessary to give us this rare kind of glimpse into galactic life in the early days of the universe.

Provided by NASA

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The Hubble Space Telescope captured an image of the constellation Hydra, showcasing stars and galaxies at varying distances. Nearby stars within the Milky Way are identifiable by diffraction spikes. The image features LEDA 803211, a galaxy 622 million light-years away, and a gravitationally lensed galaxy forming an Einstein ring, visible as it was when the universe was 2.5 billion years old. This phenomenon results from the bending of light due to spacetime curvature.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.