In the 2024 Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes Calendar, the month of May is centred on the spacetime-bending galaxy cluster SPT-CL J001-2026.
Ready to print .pdf here:
📷
@NASA
,
@ESA
, H. Ebeling
Our
#HubbleTopImage
features the galaxy cluster Abell 1758 ✨ which – though first thought to be a single massive object – is a double cluster! Only its northern sub-cluster is visible in this image.
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📷
@NASA
,
@ESA
Hubble has been on the hunt for X-rays! 🕵️🩻 This view of the glittering dwarf galaxy IC 776 was captured as part of that effort.
Read more here:
📷
@ESA
/
@Hubble_Space
,
@NASA
, M. Sun
🎶 Stellardrone - Endevour
This is the globular cluster NGC 6440, as seen by Hubble and
@ESA_Webb
centuries after its discovery! 🔭✨
Compare the views with our slider tool:
📷
@NASA
,
@ESA
, N. Bartmann (ESA/
@esa_webb
)
🎶 Stellardrone - The Night Sky in Motion
🐴⭐ As one of the most distinctive objects in the sky, it's no surprise that the Horsehead Nebula has been observed by Hubble,
@ESA_Euclid
and now
@ESA_Webb
too!
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Decades after it was discovered in a photographic survey which used glass plates, here’s the glowing spiral galaxy ESO 422-41! 🌌
Access more space-themed .gifs at our giphy page:
Our
#HubbleTopImage
features the sparkling spiral galaxy NGC 6744 ✨ it was captured as part of Hubble’s LEGUS survey, which observed 50 galaxies in visible and ultraviolet light.
See more:
📷
@NASA
,
@ESA
, and the LEGUS team
First captured on a glass plate in the 1970s, ESO 422-41's patchy, star-filled structure is laid out in intricate detail in this new Hubble image 🌌
Read more here:
📷
@ESA
/
@Hubble_Space
,
@NASA
, C. Kilpatrick
🎶 Stellardrone - Ascent