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Archive for the tag “Hubble Telescope”

The Solar Observatory Cover-Up

Ryushin Malone reports he caught the FBI red-handed in their attempt to cover up a 2018 solar-observatory shutdown. Malone says not only did they raid and shut down the Sunspot Solar Observatory in New Mexico, they also closed all solar observatories around the world.

Malone says in addition to shutting down the observatories for 11 days, they put the Hubble telescope to sleep. The FBI’s explanation for the shutdown was to investigate child porn photos allegedly found on a Sunspot employee’s computer, but Malone says the real reason was to cover up a massive solar flare that no one was warned about! He believes the FBI might have even manipulated the weather to hide the event. Here’s his scintillating report.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/NVmU9o1RMhHJ/

More Galaxies Than We Thought

The total number of galaxies in the visible, observable universe is much higher than we thought. Surprisingly, if you began a raw count of one galaxy per second right now, you probably would reach about three billion near the end of your life.

Common knowledge in the scientific world puts the inexact number of galaxies at around 100 to 400  billion, not counting those in the invisible universe that is beyond our reach. And this idea of an observable universe is important, because the cosmos is expanding and what once were the edges are now disappearing beyond our view.

Although there are galaxies beyond our reach that we will never observe, we have our hands full with those we can view. And, scientists note, they come in a variety of shapes and sizes. Here’s more with Anton Petrov.

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Ultra Rare Black Hole Found

Finally, science has confirmed the existence of a distant, intermediate massive black hole in a  galaxy approximately 740 million light years away. The first hint of this discovery actually came in 2006, when scientists detected some X-ray bursts powerful enough to indicate something was being destroyed. With the help of the massive Hubble Space Telescope, it was confirmed there was only one plausible explanation for this activity–it was likely an intermediate massive black hole destroying a star, creating a tremendous amount of energy in the process. Host Anton Petrov brings us more in this episode of What Da Math.

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The 13 Billion-Year-Old Photo

In the last 30 years, the Hubble Telescope has taken millions of incredible photos of distant stars and galaxies. But Hubble’s best images have come and gone, and the world’s most famous telescope will sadly come to an end in the not-to-distant future. This episode of Primal Space looks at how Hubble managed to capture an image of the most distant galaxy in the known universe, located 32 billion light-years away.

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Trillions of Galaxies in Universe

The Milky Way Galaxy is our cosmic home, but we are definitely not alone in the observable universe. With the help of the revolutionary Hubble telescope, astronomers took their first deep look at the universe in 1995 and revealed a mind-blowing estimate of 120 billion galaxies. With the advanced technology of the Hubble and other telescopes, a new analysis of deep space has led astronomers to revise that estimate 10 fold into the trillions, since 90 percent of the galaxies in the universe are too faint and too far away for the current generation of telescopes to observe. Tune in to the full story presented by Videos From Space.

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Hubble Realms of Light

Getting ready for the advent of 4k TV. Revel in some of the highest resolution images from the Hubble Space Telescope. Even now you can see the detail now in these inspiring images, but be sure to check back when you have lined up your 4k monitor or TV in the coming years.

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Caught in the Cosmic Web

In this episode of the Hubblecast, Joe Liske (aka Dr J) shows how a team of astronomers has used Hubble and other telescopes to discover the secrets of massive galaxy cluster MACS J0717. They have found that an invisible filament of dark matter extends out of the cluster. This is our first direct glimpse of the shape of the scaffolding that gives the Universe its structure.

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