The pakistani local sex videosaging Hubble Space Telescope looks back into deep time, billions of years ago, before our sun was even born.
At the very limits of Hubble's viewing abilities lies a cluster of spiraling, disk-shaped galaxies, collectively called SPT0615. NASA posted an image of these ancient structures, one of which was born over 13 billion years ago, relatively soon after the Big Bang likely created the universe. Light left these faraway galaxies long ago, but Hubble can sleuth out this ancient luminosity.
"The light from distant objects travels to us from so far away that it takes an immensely long time to reach us, meaning that it carries information from the past — information about the time at which it was emitted," NASA wrote.
Viewing these galaxy clusters is an eerie look at events that transpired long ago. But it's something the space agency's astronomers do every day.
SEE ALSO: What's actually going on in that cryptic black hole photo?"Just as ancient paintings can tell us about the period of history in which they were painted, so too can ancient galaxies tell us about the era of the universe in which they existed," NASA wrote.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The White House might have inflated Trump's golf record, because this is how we live now
Leaked images might have revealed iPhone SE 2 with wireless charging
Here's what to watch on Hulu in May
OnePlus 6 launch event announced for May 16 in London
China just built the world's biggest floating solar project
What the 'Avengers 4' hero lineup will look like after 'Infinity War'
Studio Ghibli offers a glimpse into its new theme park
'Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery' lets you live your Hogwarts dreams
Google's data center raises the stakes in this state's 'water wars'
This robot pizza company's delivery trucks can now bake 120 pizzas per hour
Use Your Gaming Laptop and Play On Battery Power? Is It Possible?
Scott Pruitt proposes EPA limit agency's use of scientific studies
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。