Updated
Updated · Science@NASA · Jun 12
Hubble Captures MACS0329-0211, Revealing 2 Lensed Galaxy Arcs
Updated
Updated · Science@NASA · Jun 12

Hubble Captures MACS0329-0211, Revealing 2 Lensed Galaxy Arcs

3 articles · Updated · Science@NASA · Jun 12

Summary

  • NASA released a Hubble image of galaxy cluster MACS0329-0211 showing faint gravitationally lensed arcs in the upper-right quadrant and a bright, distorted figure-eight shape near the center.
  • The cluster’s immense gravity bends and magnifies light from more distant galaxies, making MACS0329-0211 a natural lens for viewing objects from the universe’s earliest stages.
  • Hubble observed the cluster under a program targeting X-ray-bright galaxy clusters, using the Advanced Camera for Surveys and Wide Field Camera 3 to collect visible and infrared data.
  • Those broad-spectrum observations help researchers study how massive galaxy clusters formed and how large-scale structure in the universe evolved.

Insights

Do these warped images of deep space confirm dark matter, or could they hint at a flaw in our understanding of gravity?
How are AI models using Hubble's data to create the first 3D maps of the universe's invisible dark-matter web?
As Hubble's orbit decays, can its cosmic lens observations solve the mystery of dark matter before its mission ends?