Science
Move Over Hubble, There's a New Deep Field In Town
Posted by Jack Loftus at 1:30 AM on November 10, 2008
The Hubble space telescope, despite its foibles, is perhaps best known for the humbling, amazing, and awesome image known as the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF). The HUDF, assembled from 800 separate exposures, offered humans an incredible look back at the history of the universe (and no fewer than 10,000 galaxies). Well, another magnificent piece of human engineering, the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope, played some cosmic Chasing the Jones' this past week when it captured the deepest ground-based U-band image of the universe. Ever. We are so small.
Space junkies, go to town with the full presser below. And, for those of you with some time on your hands, the ESO has a link to the full 80 MB TIFF image in the page we linked to below.
A Pool of Distant Galaxies - the deepest ultraviolet image of the Universe yet
Anyone who has wondered what it might be like to dive into a pool of millions of distant galaxies of different shapes and colours, will enjoy the latest image released by ESO. Obtained in part with the Very Large Telescope, the image is the deepest ground-based U-band image of the Universe ever obtained. It contains more than 27 million pixels and is the result of 55 hours of observations with the VIMOS instrument.
This uniquely beautiful patchwork image, with its myriad of brightly coloured galaxies, shows the Chandra Deep Field South (CDF-S), arguably the most observed and best studied region in the entire sky. The CDF-S is one of the two regions selected as part of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS), an effort of the worldwide astronomical community that unites the deepest observations from ground- and space-based facilities at all wavelengths from X-ray to radio. Its primary purpose is to provide astronomers with the most sensitive census of the distant Universe to assist in their study of the formation and evolution of galaxies.
The new image released by ESO combines data obtained with the VIMOS instrument in the U- and R-bands, as well as data obtained in the B-band with the Wide-Field Imager (WFI) attached to the 2.2 m MPG/ESO telescope at La Silla, in the framework of the GABODS survey.
The newly released U-band image - the result of 40 hours of staring at the same region of the sky and just made ready by the GOODS team - is the deepest image ever taken from the ground in this wavelength domain. At these depths, the sky is almost completely covered by galaxies, each one, like our own galaxy, the Milky Way, home of hundreds of billions of stars.
Galaxies were detected that are a billion times fainter than the unaided eye can see and over a range of colours not directly observable by the eye. This deep image has been essential to the discovery of a large number of new galaxies that are so far away that they are seen as they were when the Universe was only 2 billion years old.
In this sea of galaxies - or island universes as they are sometimes called - only a very few stars belonging to the Milky Way are seen. One of them is so close that it moves very fast on the sky. This "high proper motion star" is visible to the left of the second brightest star in the image. It appears as a funny elongated rainbow because the star moved while the data were being taken in the different filters over several years.

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
Cetrian
Posted 3:57 AM 10/11/08
*than*
~Courtesy of your free, online Grammar Nazi.
Cetrian
SouthendXGF
Posted 4:19 AM 10/11/08
@SouthendXGF: Alternatively, Where's Waldo for web 2.0
SouthendXGF
SouthendXGF
Posted 4:18 AM 10/11/08
somewhere in all that infinite cosmos i'll bet there exists an iPhone that "just works"
SouthendXGF
dambo29
Posted 4:14 AM 10/11/08
@Cetrian: Yeah... Jack tends to have problems like that...
dambo29
lazerpenguin
Posted 5:46 AM 10/11/08
@SouthendXGF: well according to the HHGTTG since the universe is infinite nothing is impossible which means that there is an entire planet, somewhere, with naturally accruing iphones. They would then be mined from the iphone mines by iphone miners. That is until someone found a planet with google phone mines.
lazerpenguin
Nickbee
Posted 6:23 AM 10/11/08
@dambo29: A blogger who isn't too good with correct grammar?
Nickbee
soccer1105
Posted 7:56 AM 10/11/08
To see how tiny we are, and to get a small glimpse of how much more "stuff" there is out there... this is beyond amazing.
soccer1105
rimshot515
Posted 9:28 AM 10/11/08
Very Large Telescope, eh?
Astronomers don't have very good imaginations, do they?
rimshot515
kidjesus
Posted 9:35 AM 10/11/08
@Cetrian: So, you're trying to exterminate an entire race of people because of their religious beliefs? Or are you just one of the many who overuse and/or misuse the term "Nazi?"
Sorry, one of my pet peeves. Just as perfect grammar is to others. (And now I put this reply in the right place. Bully for me!)
kidjesus
kidjesus
Posted 9:34 AM 10/11/08
@kidjesus: Dammit, and then I went and put this in the wrong place. D'oh.
kidjesus
kidjesus
Posted 9:33 AM 10/11/08
@undefined: So, you're trying to exterminate an entire race of people because of their religious beliefs? Or are you just one of the many who overuse and/or misuse the term "Nazi?"
Sorry, one of my pet peeves. Just as perfect grammar is to others.
kidjesus
weak_pig
Posted 5:40 PM 10/11/08
all these tiny lights remind me of the lights you see in a city when you fly overhead on a plane. Don't they look very similar?
weak_pig
frigg
Posted 11:59 PM 10/11/08
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field captured images of galaxies formed when the Universe was only 400-800 million years old, so still reigns supreme.
frigg
invictus2006
Posted 1:20 AM 11/11/08
am i the only one that see's some sort of pattern
invictus2006
Rustabout
Posted 1:24 AM 11/11/08
@Rustabout: *chosen*
damn no edit
Rustabout
Rustabout
Posted 1:24 AM 11/11/08
@invictus2006: You must be The Chose One
Rustabout
reddingofish
Posted 4:06 AM 11/11/08
If they can see this many galaxies now, imagine what our grandkids will be looking at on their comm panels or video walls or what ever they're gonna call them.
reddingofish
gloveofpower
Posted 6:01 AM 12/11/08
Carl Sagan would be proud. Awesome stuff.
gloveofpower