Hubble image of 4 distant irregular blue galaxies
R820/0264 Rights Managed
530 pixels on longest edge, unwatermarked
Request/Download high-res file
Uncompressed file size: 52.1MB
Downloadable file size: 4.2MB
This image is part of the feature Hubble Sheds Light On The "Faint Blue Galaxy" Mystery
Credit: NASA/ESA/STSCI/R.GRIFFITHS, JHU/ SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Caption: Faint blue galaxies. Hubble Space Telescope images of four irregular faint blue galaxies, the most common class of objects in the Universe. These galaxies are at a distance of between three billion and eight billion light years from Earth, and so are seen as they were at an early time in the life of the Universe. The blue areas denote intense star-forming activity. Many such galaxies have a wide range of shapes, unlike the spiral and elliptical galaxies common today. This suggests that the irregular galaxies have either faded or been destroyed by collisions and mergers over the last few billion years.
Release details: Model release not required. Property release not required.
Keywords: astronomy, blue, blue galaxy, cosmology, early galaxies, faint blue, faint blue galaxy, galactic, galaxies, galaxy, hst, hst image, hst post-servicing, irregular, irregular galaxy, science, universe
Licence fees: A licence fee will be charged for any media (low or high resolution) used in your project.
