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STScI-PRC00-18b
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Distant Quasar's Brilliant Light
The arrow in this image, taken by a ground-based
telescope, points to a distant quasar, the brilliant core of an
active galaxy residing billions of light-years from Earth. As light
from this faraway object travels across space, it picks up information
on galaxies and the vast clouds of material between galaxies as
it moves through them. The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
aboard NASA's Hubble Space Telescope decoded the quasar's light
to find the spectral "fingerprints" of highly ionized (energized)
oxygen, which had mixed with invisible clouds of hydrogen in intergalactic
space. The quasar's brilliant beam pierced at least four separate
filaments of the invisible hydrogen laced with the telltale oxygen.
The presence of oxygen between the galaxies implies there are huge
quantities of hydrogen in the universe.
Credits :
WIYN Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. The
telescope is owned and operated by the University of Wisconsin,
Indiana University, Yale University, and the National Optical Astronomy
Observatories.
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