The GOODS-South field

This composite image of the GOODS-South field — the result of an extremely deep survey using two of the four giant 8.2-metre telescopes composing ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) and a unique custom-built filter — shows some of the faintest galaxies ever seen. It also allows astronomers to determine that 90% of galaxies whose light took 10 billion years to reach us have gone undiscovered.

The image is based on data acquired with the FORS and HAWK-I instruments on the VLT. It shows in particular two varieties of light emitted by excited hydrogen atoms, known as Lyman-alpha and H-alpha.

Kilde:

ESO/M. Hayes

Om billedet

Id:eso1013a
Type:Observation
Udgivelsesdato:24. marts 2010 19:00
Relaterede pressemeddelelser:eso1013
Størrelse:1787 x 1787 px

Om objektet

Navn:GOODS South field
Type:Early Universe : Galaxy : Grouping : Cluster
Afstand:z=2.2 (rødforskydning)
Constellation:Fornax
Kategori:Galaxy Clusters

Billedformater

Stor JPEG
802,5 KB
Skrærm JPEG
237,8 KB

Baggrundsbilleder

1024x768
233,2 KB
1280x1024
359,8 KB
1600x1200
506,0 KB
1920x1200
539,3 KB
2048x1536
724,0 KB

Koordinater

Position (RA):3 32 32.74
Position (Dec):-27° 47' 20.40"
Field of view:7.47 x 7.47 arcminutes
Orientering:Nord er 44.4° venstre fra lodret

Farver & filtre

BåndBølgelængdeTeleskop
Optisk
Ly-alpha
390 nmVery Large Telescope
FORS1
Optisk
H-alpha
2.1 μmVery Large Telescope
HAWK-I