Hubble Heritage Project
Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Adventurer experience
The Hubble Heritage Project started in 1998 by Keith Noll, Howard Bond, Forrest Hamilton, Anne Kinney, and Zoltan Levay at the Space Telescope Science Institute. The team also had Carol Christian, Jayanne English, and Lisa Frattare.
Until 2016, the Hubble Heritage Project shared beautiful pictures of space almost every month. These pictures showed amazing things in the sky, like planets, stars, galaxies, and groups of galaxies called galaxy clusters.
The project helped people around the world see and learn about the wonders of space using the powerful Hubble Space Telescope. It made space exploration and astronomy more fun and easy for everyone, especially young learners interested in the universe.
Description
The Hubble Heritage Project picked beautiful pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope and made new pictures. They wanted to create colorful, eye-catching images while keeping the science accurate.
The project helped many people enjoy astronomy. It won an award in 2003 for making astronomy fun for everyone. Some of its pictures were shown in galleries and even appeared on stamps, like one showing the Ring Nebula to honor astronomer Edwin P. Hubble. You can see these images on the Hubble Space Telescope's website, Hubblesite.
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