The Sombero Galaxy - Voted the best picture taken by the Hubble telescope.

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The Sombrero Galaxy – 28 million light years from Earth. The dimensions of the galaxy, officially called M104, are as spectacular as its appearance. It has 800 billion suns and is 50,000 light years across.

galaxyz.jpg
 
I'm always underwhelmed by these kind of photos after working with the astronomers who work with hubble and a few large radio telescopes. I'm not sure they should even be called photos with the amount of redrawing and colouring in that is done with them, you might as well be looking at a computer generated image, in fact you pretty much are, albeit an accurately laid out one.
 
I'm always underwhelmed by these kind of photos after working with the astronomers who work with hubble and a few large radio telescopes. I'm not sure they should even be called photos with the amount of redrawing and colouring in that is done with them, you might as well be looking at a computer generated image, in fact you pretty much are, albeit an accurately laid out one.

That's interesting. So what do the actual images Hubble captures look like in their raw form?
 
You do realize that most of the time they have to be redrawn and coloured so that we can even see them?

Err yes, I worked for one of the largest astronomical organisations in the world for 3 years, hence I find these photos completely 'meh' because they aren't photos at all.
 
I'm always underwhelmed by these kind of photos after working with the astronomers who work with hubble and a few large radio telescopes. I'm not sure they should even be called photos with the amount of redrawing and colouring in that is done with them, you might as well be looking at a computer generated image, in fact you pretty much are, albeit an accurately laid out one.

Don't agree with this, plenty af amateurs can take photos just as good as this. They just take stupidly long exposures.

I know this is no comparison, and a really bad example...! But I'm just posting it up because this was pretty much my very first image through a telescope, for a relatively short exposure, of andromeda galaxy.

Doesn't illustrate my point very well but if you look below the bright spot you can just about make out a dust lane, which with a much longer exposure (that was prob about 30s and limited by the tracking ability of my telescope) and dark skies couled definately turn in to something closely resembling the above picture.

1a.jpg
 
Great picture, even though I do realise that quite a lot of Hubble 'photos' are coloured and redrawn. I do quite a bit of night sky photography with my SLR, just need to save up and get enough equipment to be able to capture other galaxies.

Err yes, I worked for one of the largest astronomical organisations in the world for 3 years, hence I find these photos completely 'meh' because they aren't photos at all.

Out of interest, who was it you worked for, if you don't mind me asking?
 
Found a good slideshow that shows step-by-step how Hubble images are made. It's by one of the scientists that took one of the most famous images.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/0303/01-howi-flash.html

Hmm thats not too bad at all tbh, I was expecting more manipulation than that.

Its interesting that they have to tune the camera for specific wavelengths like that to make monochrome images.

We know what colour each wavelength looks like ( within reason of human spectrum) so its not as bad a fudge as it may appear. It probably doesn't look too different if we were to actually go there.

sid
 
I'm always underwhelmed by these kind of photos after working with the astronomers who work with hubble and a few large radio telescopes. I'm not sure they should even be called photos with the amount of redrawing and colouring in that is done with them, you might as well be looking at a computer generated image, in fact you pretty much are, albeit an accurately laid out one.
They can be called photos, computer generated images or beansprout teapots for all I care.

They're awesome to look at :).
 
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