30 March 2023
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  • [ 29 March 2023 ] Supermassive black holes not impressive enough? Try the ultramassive version News
  • [ 28 March 2023 ] James Webb’s infrared vision lets astronomers take an exoplanet’s temperature News
  • [ 27 March 2023 ] NASA gearing up for OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample recovery News
  • [ 23 March 2023 ] A simpler, more mundane explanation for ‘Oumuamua’s strange behaviour News
  • [ 22 March 2023 ] Japanese Hakuto-R moon lander slips into lunar orbit News
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Ignacio Trujillo

News

Ten-metre Canary Island telescope obtains deepest Earth-based galaxy image

10 June 2016 Astronomy Now

The Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) set out to test the limit of observation which can be reached using the largest optical-infrared telescope in the world: the Gran Telescopio CANARIAS (GTC). The observers managed to obtain an image 10 times deeper than any other obtained from the ground, observing a faint halo of stars around the galaxy UGC0180.

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News Headlines

  • Supermassive black holes not impressive enough? Try the ultramassive version
    29 March 2023
  • James Webb’s infrared vision lets astronomers take an exoplanet’s temperature
    28 March 2023
  • NASA gearing up for OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample recovery
    27 March 2023
  • A simpler, more mundane explanation for ‘Oumuamua’s strange behaviour
    23 March 2023
  • Japanese Hakuto-R moon lander slips into lunar orbit
    22 March 2023
  • Home
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      • March last issue
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  • Spaceflight Now
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
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    • Ask Astronomy Now
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