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Astronomie - The Hubble Space Telescope Still Works Great — Except When It Doesnt

9.09.2020

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An STS-125 crew member onboard the space shuttle Atlantis snaps a still photo of the Hubble Space Telescope following grapple of the giant observatory by the shuttle.

Johnson Space Center/NASA

Mike Brown has been using the Hubble Space Telescope pretty consistently for most of the past three decades since it launched in 1990. But recently he had an experience with Hubble that he never had before.

Brown, an astronomer at the California Institute of Technology, got permission to use Hubble to do a detailed study of Jupiter's four largest moons. These moons are called the Galilean moons after Galileo Galilei, who spotted them in 1610.

They include: Ganymede, which is bigger than the planet Mercury and has a mysterious magnetic field; Io, which is the most volcanically active place in the solar system; Europa, which has more liquid water than Earth; and Callisto, which is kind of a simple ol' cratered moon.

After Hubble was supposed to have checked out Ganymede, the data got beamed down, processed and sent to Brown by email. He eagerly opened it up. There was nothing there.

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