© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007. Edwin Hubble 1889-1953 Hubble was born in Marshfield,...

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© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Edwin Hubble

1889-1953

Hubble was born in Marshfield, Missouri.

He earned a law degree and worked as a lawyer for one year.

Hubble gave up law, deciding that “he’d rather be a bad astronomer than a good lawyer”. He went on to become one of the outstanding astronomers in history.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

The Hubble Space Telescope was named in his honor. It was

launched in 1990 and orbits about 375 miles above the surface of the

earth.

The HST was designed so that astronauts from the space shuttle can make any needed repairs. A

faulty mirror was replaced in 1993.

Dr. Hubble made some of the most important discoveries in

modern astronomy.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

This is the Hubble Space

Telescope.

It’s about the size of a

school bus.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Hubble Telescope Trivia

Did you know that:

Hubble travels at a speed of 5 miles per second, or 18,000

miles/hour.

Hubble completes an orbit every 97

minutes.Traveling at Hubble’s speed, a trip from L.A. to N.Y.C. would take

10 minutes.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

In an average orbit, Hubble uses about the same amount of energy

as 24 100-watt light bulbs.

Hubble transmits enough data every day to fill 10,000

standard computer disks.

Hubble can’t observe the sun or Mercury, which is

too close to the sun.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

A “starburst” galaxy. Starburst galaxies make new stars at a

very rapid rate.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

The death of a star.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Saturn

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Gaseous ”hula-hoops"

A large pair of gaseous rings surrounding a massive dying star

(PR94-22 May 19, 1994)

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

A "butterfly" or a bipolar planetary

nebula.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

This spiral galaxy is so far away, Hubble sees it as it appeared at about the time

dinosaurs roamed the Earth.

Spiral Galaxy M100

January 1994

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Gaseous Pillars in the Eagle Nebula

Star-Birth Clouds - M16

Star-Birth Clouds - M16

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Gallery of Galaxies

Hubble looks back more than 10 billion years to reveal at least 1,500 galaxies at

various stages of development.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

A galaxy cluster.

© 2006 Plano ISD, Plano, TX/Klein ISD 2007

Bibliography

The Hubble Project. (December 1, 2001)

http://hubble.nasa.gov/

Hubble Site.

http://hubble.stsci.edu/