A beautiful composite image taken by the
Hubble Space Telescope, that indicates evidence for dark matter, when seen in hi-res many dozens of galaxies including
spiral galaxies like our own Milky Way can be seen some 5 Billion light years away giving us an image older then the Earth.
NASA, ESA, M. J. Jee & H. Ford et al. (Johns Hopkins U.)
Support as nominator — ▪◦▪
≡ЅiREX≡Talk 10:12, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Support Breathtaking but a little fuzzy --
St.danielTalk 12:03, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Strong oppose. I would have uploaded and nommed this image myself, except that it ain't PD. The image is credited to NASA, ESA, M. J. Jee and H. Ford (Johns Hopkins University). Only images credited to the STSCI are PD, as mentioned in the
copyright page.
MER-C 12:13, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
This is a PD image,
[1][2]. Other organizations my be contracted "or prepared for NASA under Contract NAS5-26555." -
Chris H 15:11, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
There's nothing like self-contradictory copyright info. Changed to tentative support, as we are able to argue it's PD. Meh.
MER-C 08:57, 23 May 2007 (UTC)reply
oppose - I will support the original only, I uploaded it several days ago for the
CL0024+17 article.
Chris H 14:57, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
And why is that? Anyways, each and every Telescope image we get to see here is postprocessed big time. Astronomers don't care about natural look, they want to enhance the details they are interested in. And in this case its the dark ring, which is completely invisible in the so called original. --
Dschwen 17:54, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Sorry but the blue stuff is just a computer generated gravitational field that has been overlapped, that covers up the real visible light image.
Chris H 18:40, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Oh... right... well...
THEY SHOULD PUT THAT ON THE BOX! It should be clearly stated in the caption. Anyways, I think the composing adds to the enc value. --
Dschwen 19:09, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
A beautiful composite image taken by the
Hubble Space Telescope, that indicates evidence for dark matter, when seen in hi-res many dozens of galaxies including
spiral galaxies like our own Milky Way can be seen some 5 Billion light years away giving us an image older then the Earth.
NASA, ESA, M. J. Jee & H. Ford et al. (Johns Hopkins U.)
Support as nominator — ▪◦▪
≡ЅiREX≡Talk 10:12, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Support Breathtaking but a little fuzzy --
St.danielTalk 12:03, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Strong oppose. I would have uploaded and nommed this image myself, except that it ain't PD. The image is credited to NASA, ESA, M. J. Jee and H. Ford (Johns Hopkins University). Only images credited to the STSCI are PD, as mentioned in the
copyright page.
MER-C 12:13, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
This is a PD image,
[1][2]. Other organizations my be contracted "or prepared for NASA under Contract NAS5-26555." -
Chris H 15:11, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
There's nothing like self-contradictory copyright info. Changed to tentative support, as we are able to argue it's PD. Meh.
MER-C 08:57, 23 May 2007 (UTC)reply
oppose - I will support the original only, I uploaded it several days ago for the
CL0024+17 article.
Chris H 14:57, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
And why is that? Anyways, each and every Telescope image we get to see here is postprocessed big time. Astronomers don't care about natural look, they want to enhance the details they are interested in. And in this case its the dark ring, which is completely invisible in the so called original. --
Dschwen 17:54, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Sorry but the blue stuff is just a computer generated gravitational field that has been overlapped, that covers up the real visible light image.
Chris H 18:40, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply
Oh... right... well...
THEY SHOULD PUT THAT ON THE BOX! It should be clearly stated in the caption. Anyways, I think the composing adds to the enc value. --
Dschwen 19:09, 22 May 2007 (UTC)reply