WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.190 --> 00:00:04.210 Reporter: Hubble's newest and final Frontier Field image 2 00:00:04.210 --> 00:00:07.220 shows us just how vast and crowded our universe is 3 00:00:07.220 --> 00:00:10.410 when it looked at just a tiny portion of the sky. 4 00:00:10.410 --> 00:00:13.610 So what is a galaxy and what kind of super power did Hubble use to 5 00:00:13.610 --> 00:00:15.620 capture this new image? 6 00:00:15.620 --> 00:00:18.810 We are joined by Jim Jeletic at NASA's 7 00:00:18.810 --> 00:00:21.830 Goddard Space Flight Center who's going to show us this new view. 8 00:00:21.830 --> 00:00:22.860 Thanks for joining us. 9 00:00:22.860 --> 00:00:23.880 Jim: Thanks for having me. 10 00:00:23.880 --> 00:00:26.080 Reporter: So start by telling us, what is a galaxy 11 00:00:26.080 --> 00:00:29.150 and can you show us what Hubble has seen? 12 00:00:29.150 --> 00:00:32.160 Jim: Sure, well galaxies are these flat plates 13 00:00:32.160 --> 00:00:35.170 that have lots of stars, like billions, sometimes trillions 14 00:00:35.170 --> 00:00:38.290 of stars, gas, and dust and they're all kind of circling 15 00:00:38.290 --> 00:00:39.290 around a central point. 16 00:00:39.290 --> 00:00:41.310 And this 27th anniversary image shows you 17 00:00:41.310 --> 00:00:43.330 two spiral galaxies, one edge on 18 00:00:43.330 --> 00:00:45.380 on the left and one on the right. 19 00:00:45.380 --> 00:00:47.400 The one on the right, which is the most face on would 20 00:00:47.400 --> 00:00:49.590 take you 450,000 years to get from 21 00:00:49.590 --> 00:00:49.610 one side to the other. 22 00:00:49.610 --> 00:00:51.730 one side to the other, if you were traveling 23 00:00:51.730 --> 00:00:52.840 at the speed of light. 24 00:00:52.840 --> 00:00:55.870 The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second. 25 00:00:55.870 --> 00:00:58.910 So that's why this image of just a small portion of 26 00:00:58.910 --> 00:01:00.920 the sky is so incredible. 27 00:01:00.920 --> 00:01:02.930 Look at all the galaxies there and 28 00:01:02.930 --> 00:01:04.940 think about how big these things are. 29 00:01:04.940 --> 00:01:06.960 You see all kinds, you see the spiral galaxies 30 00:01:06.960 --> 00:01:09.140 like we saw before, you see those elliptical galaxies 31 00:01:09.140 --> 00:01:11.260 which are those yellowish ones 32 00:01:11.260 --> 00:01:13.280 that have older 33 00:01:13.280 --> 00:01:15.290 stars in it. 34 00:01:15.290 --> 00:01:17.500 And you even see galaxies collitions. 35 00:01:17.500 --> 00:01:19.580 So it's incredible you can get so many galaxies in one 36 00:01:19.580 --> 00:01:21.600 part of the sky and infact no matter 37 00:01:21.600 --> 00:01:23.620 which direction you look in the sky 38 00:01:23.620 --> 00:01:25.810 your going to see the same thing 39 00:01:25.810 --> 00:01:27.880 which means there's probably about 2 trillion galaxies 40 00:01:27.880 --> 00:01:30.060 in the universe or about as many 41 00:01:30.060 --> 00:01:32.070 galaxies in the universe as there are fish in the sea. 42 00:01:32.070 --> 00:01:35.080 So there are a lot of galaxies that need guarding. 43 00:01:35.080 --> 00:01:38.090 Reporter: What superpower did Hubble use 44 00:01:38.090 --> 00:01:41.290 to see these faint and distance galaxies 45 00:01:41.290 --> 00:01:42.500 in the new image? 46 00:01:42.500 --> 00:01:44.720 Jim: Well mother nature provides a 47 00:01:44.720 --> 00:01:48.950 common magnifying glass capability 48 00:01:48.950 --> 00:01:51.140 and it uses something called gravitational lensing. 49 00:01:51.140 --> 00:01:53.150 Where if you put an object 50 00:01:53.150 --> 00:01:55.180 of heavy mass and sprinkle in some dark matter 51 00:01:55.180 --> 00:01:57.190 it will bend and warp space 52 00:01:57.190 --> 00:01:59.210 in such that the light will be magnified 53 00:01:59.210 --> 00:02:01.390 and brightened and warped around 54 00:02:01.390 --> 00:02:03.580 that big object so you can see it. 55 00:02:03.580 --> 00:02:05.600 So in this case here that 56 00:02:05.600 --> 00:02:07.610 dragon type thing you see in the center of the screen 57 00:02:07.610 --> 00:02:09.630 that's actually 5 images 58 00:02:09.630 --> 00:02:11.640 of the same galaxy mirrored 59 00:02:11.640 --> 00:02:13.670 right next to each other. 60 00:02:13.670 --> 00:02:15.690 And then in this other case we're going to see 61 00:02:15.690 --> 00:02:17.710 these really really small 62 00:02:17.710 --> 00:02:19.730 faint red galaxies 63 00:02:19.730 --> 00:02:21.750 that who's light it took 64 00:02:21.750 --> 00:02:27.940 600 million years that it was born. 65 00:02:27.940 --> 00:02:30.000 So we wouldn't be able to see 66 00:02:30.000 --> 00:02:33.010 this without this gravitational lens capability. 67 00:02:33.010 --> 00:02:36.010 So it really provides us new capability where by Hubble 68 00:02:36.010 --> 00:02:39.030 can look into the magnifying glass of nature 69 00:02:39.030 --> 00:02:42.040 and see even further into space then we would have been see otherwise. 70 00:02:42.040 --> 00:02:45.220 Reporter: Now you mention dark matter 71 00:02:45.220 --> 00:02:48.400 that sounds like something a villain might use. 72 00:02:48.400 --> 00:02:50.410 How do missions like Hubble help us learn about 73 00:02:50.410 --> 00:02:52.420 one of natures biggest secrets? 74 00:02:52.420 --> 00:02:54.430 Jim: Well dark matter is this really exoctic stuff 75 00:02:54.430 --> 00:02:56.440 and we don't know what it is 76 00:02:56.440 --> 00:02:58.450 we can't see it because it doesn't give out 77 00:02:58.450 --> 00:03:00.480 any light but it takes over 80% 78 00:03:00.480 --> 00:03:02.490 of all the matter in the universe 79 00:03:02.490 --> 00:03:04.510 What we can do is we can see effects that it has 80 00:03:04.510 --> 00:03:06.570 do to its gravity and we can map those 81 00:03:06.570 --> 00:03:08.590 effects and that's what you're seeing here with the blue 82 00:03:08.590 --> 00:03:10.780 we're mapping where we believe the dark matter is 83 00:03:10.780 --> 00:03:12.800 by how it distorts 84 00:03:12.800 --> 00:03:14.810 the light from background galaxies 85 00:03:14.810 --> 00:03:16.820 but we also then can take a look at 86 00:03:16.820 --> 00:03:18.840 galaxies themselves because 87 00:03:18.840 --> 00:03:20.860 dark matter is the glue that holds 88 00:03:20.860 --> 00:03:22.870 galaxies together 89 00:03:22.870 --> 00:03:24.880 and makes them spin the way they do 90 00:03:24.880 --> 00:03:26.990 so if we study galaxies as well 91 00:03:26.990 --> 00:03:29.010 hopefully we can learn a little bit more about 92 00:03:29.010 --> 00:03:31.020 this dark matter and maybe someday even figure out 93 00:03:31.020 --> 00:03:33.110 how we can detect it directly as opposed 94 00:03:33.110 --> 00:03:36.120 to just by seeing it by its gravitational pull on other things. 95 00:03:36.120 --> 00:03:39.150 Reporter: Now Hubble just celebrated 96 00:03:39.150 --> 00:03:42.160 its 27th birthday, what's next for the 97 00:03:42.160 --> 00:03:45.180 famous space telescope? 98 00:03:45.180 --> 00:03:48.240 Jim: Well Hubble is at the peak of its scientific capability 99 00:03:48.240 --> 00:03:50.430 and still has redundancy in all its critical systems 100 00:03:50.430 --> 00:03:52.440 so we're really hopeful we can get it 101 00:03:52.440 --> 00:03:54.620 to continue to make ground breaking observations 102 00:03:54.620 --> 00:03:56.640 well into the next decade and that's 103 00:03:56.640 --> 00:03:58.820 due to all of the servicing missions 104 00:03:58.820 --> 00:04:01.040 and where the astronauts went up and they 105 00:04:01.040 --> 00:04:03.060 worked on Hubble upgrading it and repair it. 106 00:04:03.060 --> 00:04:05.230 But what we are really excited about is 107 00:04:05.230 --> 00:04:07.250 the James Webb Space Telescope 108 00:04:07.250 --> 00:04:09.260 and James Webb is going to see 109 00:04:09.260 --> 00:04:11.440 the infered light, much further into the infered 110 00:04:11.440 --> 00:04:13.460 part of the spectrum so 111 00:04:13.460 --> 00:04:15.490 if you think looking at a visible light like the Sombrero galaxy 112 00:04:15.490 --> 00:04:17.490 here the picture that Hubble took 113 00:04:17.490 --> 00:04:19.500 it will be able to take a look at 114 00:04:19.500 --> 00:04:21.520 infered light so we can see 115 00:04:21.520 --> 00:04:23.710 these different objects in different 116 00:04:23.710 --> 00:04:25.720 wavelengths and it tells us a lot more information 117 00:04:25.720 --> 00:04:27.750 about it. So we're really excited 118 00:04:27.750 --> 00:04:30.750 James Webb and it's due to launch at the end of 2018. 119 00:04:30.750 --> 00:04:33.770 Reporter: Where can we see more of Hubble's 120 00:04:33.770 --> 00:04:36.780 beautiful images like the new one you just released? 121 00:04:36.780 --> 00:04:39.810 Jim: Well if you want images, if you want videos 122 00:04:39.810 --> 00:04:41.830 if you want to see what are the biggest discoveries 123 00:04:41.830 --> 00:04:43.840 Hubble's ever made, if you want to learn about 124 00:04:43.840 --> 00:04:45.850 the telescope, you go to nasa.gov/hubble 125 00:04:45.850 --> 00:04:47.860 or you can follow us on Twitter 126 00:04:47.860 --> 00:04:49.860 @nasahubble 127 00:04:49.860 --> 00:04:50.203