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Latest News

Star Light, Star Bright, Its Explanation is Out of Sight

This pair of NASA Hubble Space Telescope pictures shows the appearance of a mysterious burst of light that was detected on February 21, 2006, brightened over 100 days, and then faded into oblivion after another 100 days. The source of the outburst remains unidentified. The event was detected serendipitously in a Hubble search for supernovae in a distant cluster of galaxies. The light-signature of this event does not match the behavior of a supernova or any previously observed astronomical transient phenomenon in the universe.

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Around The Institute

Beyond JWST:The Next Steps in UV-Optical-Near IR Astronomy

Beyond JWST
Workshop The Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) is sponsoring a workshop to engage the UV/optical/Near-IR astronomy community to discuss its long-term goals for space-based astronomy and astrophysics. The meeting will provide the UVOIR community an opportunity to look forward on a 25-year horizon to identify the scientific opportunities enabled by large and very large space telescopes and to outline a path forward that will form the basis for a community-led report to the 2010 Decadal Review Committee.

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2009 May Symposium: The Search for Life in the Universe

2009 May Symposium The concept that life might exist elsewhere besides the Earth has intrigued humankind for centuries. Technology has now enabled this fundamental question to be pursued with substantial international scientific vigor. The 2009 May Symposium, to be held May 4-7, 2009 at the Space Telescope Science Institute, will divide discussion of the motivations and expectations for the search for life in the universe into three distance domains that each require markedly different observational approaches and speakers from multiple disciplines: detecting Life within 50 AU of Earth, detecting life within 100 pc of Earth,and detecting life beyond 100 pc from Earth.   Read more...

HLA Data Release 2.5 Includes Contributed Products

Hubble Legacy
Archive DR2.5 The Hubble Legacy Archive (HLA) has entered its Data Release 2.5 (DR2.5) phase of operation. The highlight of DR2.5 is the inclusion of contributed products from the community. These include: ANGST (ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey), APPP (Archive Pure Parallels Program), COMA (ACS Treasury Survey of the Coma cluster), COSMOS (Cosmic Evolution Survey), GEMS (Galaxy Evolution from Morphologies and SEDs), GOODS (Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey), SGAL (Spiral Galaxies), a subset of Hubble Heritage images, STAGES (Space Telescope A901/902 Galaxy Evolution Survey), and UDF (Ultra Deep Field). Other contributed products are also available from MAST (Multimission Archive at STScI), and will be included in the HLA in the near future.

The HLA project is a collaboration between the Space Telescope Science Institute, the Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility, and the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre.  Read more...

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