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Vera C. Rubin Observatory Releases First Photos

  • On June 23, 2025, astronomers released the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's first images of the universe during a public event in Washington, D.C.
  • Situated in Chile’s Atacama Desert, the observatory was established to carry out a decade-long mission aimed at mapping billions of galaxies and investigating fundamental cosmic phenomena.
  • The released images showcase a combined view highlighting the Trifid and Lagoon Nebulae alongside a highly detailed portrayal of the Virgo Cluster, unveiling millions of galaxies and complex structures within these distant cosmic regions.
  • Michael Kratsios noted the observatory keeps the US at the forefront of basic science while Brian Stone said it captures more data than all previous optical telescopes combined.
  • The observatory’s data will fuel discoveries about dark matter, dark energy, and solar system objects, as it promises an unprecedented census of billions of galaxies and millions of new asteroids.
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When Timo Anguita completed his doctorate in Astronomy at the University of Heidelberg between 2005 and 2009, he became especially interested in the study of gravitational lenses: a very scarce kind of spatial phenomenon that occurs when, product of gravity, a galaxy manages to “curve” the light that comes from another much more distant body, thus creating a great magnifying glass that allows to amplify that object, which is so distant that othe…

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Ashley Strickland, CNN The first test images from an observatory named after pioneering astronomer Vera Rubin have captured the light of millions of distant stars and galaxies at an unprecedented scale and revealed thousands of never-before-seen asteroids. While the National Science Foundation initially released only a pair of images and a short video of the first images from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, more images and video taken with the la…

·Idaho Falls, United States
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Granicus broke the news in on Monday, June 23, 2025.
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