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Telescopes Optical Collection (page 5)

Telescopes Optical are an important tool in

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Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Comet ISON, April 2013 C015 / 9816

Comet ISON, April 2013 C015 / 9816
Comet ISON (C/2012 S1), as observed on 10 April 2013 by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This comet was discovered on 21 September 2012 by the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Comet ISON, April 2013 C018 / 0743

Comet ISON, April 2013 C018 / 0743
Comet ISON (C/2012 S1), as observed on 30th April 2013 by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This comet was discovered on 21 September 2012 by the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Comet ISON, November 2013 C018 / 0751

Comet ISON, November 2013 C018 / 0751
Comet ISON (C/2012 S1). This comet was discovered on 21 September 2012 by the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Comet ISON, October 2013 C018 / 0742

Comet ISON, October 2013 C018 / 0742
Comet ISON (C/2012 S1), as observed on 9th October 2013 by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This comet was discovered on 21 September 2012 by the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Cats Paw nebula, optical image

Cats Paw nebula, optical image
Cats Paw nebula (NGC 6334), optical image. The Cats Paw emission nebula is a huge stellar nursery where hundreds of stars are formed

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 891, optical image C017 / 3733

Spiral galaxy NGC 891, optical image C017 / 3733
Spiral galaxy NGC 891, combined optical image. The galaxy lies around 30 million light years from Earth in the constellation Andromeda

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Carina nebula (NGC 3372), optical image C017 / 3741

Carina nebula (NGC 3372), optical image C017 / 3741
Carina nebula (NGC 3372), optical image. This is an emission nebula, a huge cloud of gas and dust that glows as the hydrogen it contains is ionised by radiation from the hot young stars that have

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 3521, optical image C017 / 3743

Spiral galaxy NGC 3521, optical image C017 / 3743
Spiral galaxy NGC 3521, combined optical image. NGC 3521 measure 50, 000 light years across and lies 35 million light years from Earth in the constellation of Leo

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Triangulum Galaxy (M33), optical image C017 / 3724

Triangulum Galaxy (M33), optical image C017 / 3724
Triangulum Galaxy (M33, NGC 598), optical image. This galaxy is located around 3 million light years from Earth, in the constellation of Triangulum. It has a diameter of some 50, 000 light years

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Trifid Nebula M20, Hubble image C017 / 3721

Trifid Nebula M20, Hubble image C017 / 3721
Trifid Nebula (M20, NGC 6514). Combined images from the Subaru Telescope and Hubble Space telescope of the Trifid Nebula M20

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 2403, optical image C017 / 3739

Spiral galaxy NGC 2403, optical image C017 / 3739
Spiral galaxy NGC 2403, combined optical image. NGC 2403 lies about 12 million light years from Earth, in the constellation Camelopardalis

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Veil Nebula (IC 1340), optical image C017 / 3716

Veil Nebula (IC 1340), optical image C017 / 3716
Veil Nebula (IC 1340), optical image. The Veil Nebula is a cloud of heated and ionized gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Lomonosov observing transit of Venus C016 / 8382

Lomonosov observing transit of Venus C016 / 8382
Painting showing Lomonosov observing the transit of Venus across the solar disk on 26 May 1761. Mikhail Lomonosov (1711-65) was a Russian astronomer and polymath

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Carina Nebula features, HST image C013 / 5586

Carina Nebula features, HST image C013 / 5586
Carina Nebula features, HST image. These pillars of gas and dust (upper centre) within the Carina Nebula are Herbig-Haro Objects (HH 901 and HH 902)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Hookes telescopes, 17th century

Hookes telescopes, 17th century
Hookes telescopes. 17th-century engraving with labelled diagrams showing telescope equipment and mechanisms described by English scientist Robert Hooke (1635-1703)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Nebula and star cluster NGC 6604 C014 / 5043

Nebula and star cluster NGC 6604 C014 / 5043
Nebula and star cluster NGC 6604, optical and ultraviolet image. NGC 6604 is the bright grouping of stars at upper left. It is a young star cluster that is the densest part of a more widely scattered

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Fomalhaut dust ring, ALMA image C014 / 5044

Fomalhaut dust ring, ALMA image C014 / 5044
Fomalhaut dust ring, combined HST and ALMA image. The Fomalhaut star system and its planet and dust ring are around 25 light years from Earth in the constellation of Piscis Austrinus

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Lagoon Nebula, optical image C014 / 5036

Lagoon Nebula, optical image C014 / 5036
Lagoon Nebula, optical image. This is an emission nebula, a huge cloud of gas and dust that glows as the hydrogen it contains is ionised by radiation from the hot young stars that have formed within

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 6744, optical image C014 / 5040

Spiral galaxy NGC 6744, optical image C014 / 5040
Spiral galaxy NGC 6744, optical image. This large spiral galaxy is similar to the Milky Way. It is located around 30 million light years from Earth, in the constellation of Pavo

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Meathook Galaxy (NGC 2442) C014 / 5033

Meathook Galaxy (NGC 2442) C014 / 5033
Meathook Galaxy (NGC 2442), optical and infrared image. This is a wide-field view, which shows a much broader view than would be obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Hercules A galactic jets, composite image

Hercules A galactic jets, composite image. Combined radio and optical image of the galactic jets (pink) emerging from the centre of the Hercules A galaxy

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Galaxy pair Arp 116, HST image

Galaxy pair Arp 116, HST image
Galaxy pair Arp 116, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Combined optical and infrared image of the two galaxies making up the Arp 116 galaxy pair

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 922, HST image

Spiral galaxy NGC 922, HST image
Spiral galaxy NGC 922, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Combined optical and infrared image of the spiral galaxy NGC 922

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, HST image

Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, HST image
Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) optical image. This small, dim galaxy in visible light is a sparse scattering of stars that are virtually indistinguishable from the background

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Planetary nebula NGC 5198, HST image

Planetary nebula NGC 5198, HST image
Planetary nebula NGC 5198, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Combined optical and infrared image of the planetary nebula NGC 5198

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, HST image

Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, HST image
Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Optical image of the barred spiral galaxy NGC 1073. Our own galaxy, the Milky Way, is thought to be a similar barred spiral

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Optical telegraphy, 1890

Optical telegraphy, 1890
Optical telegraphy. 19th-century artwork of French soldiers using optical telegraphy. One such early device was the Mangin projector, invented by a colonel Mangin in the early 1880s

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Telescope mirror core C013 / 5306

Telescope mirror core C013 / 5306
A core removed from a telescope mirror blank made from fused quartz. The bubbles visible in the core are formed as a result of the fusing process and do not effect the quality of the blank

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope

Primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope
Hobby-Eberly telescope. Astronomer with the primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET). Commissioned in late 1997, the HET has the worlds largest primary mirror

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: The dome of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope

The dome of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) silhouetted against star trails centred on the Polaris star (left). CFHT became operative in 1979 and is situated on the top (4200m)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Dome of the WIYN telescope at Kitt Peak

Dome of the WIYN telescope at Kitt Peak
WIYN telescope. Panoramic view of the dome interior of the WIYN (Wisconsin, Indiana, Yale, NOAO) telescope, with the Kitt Peak observatory, USA, in the background

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Astronomy & the electromagnetic spectrum

Astronomy & the electromagnetic spectrum
Astronomy and the electromagnetic spectrum. The EM spectrum runs from gamma rays (left), via X-rays, ultraviolet, optical, and infrared, to radio waves (right)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope

Primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope
Hobby-Eberly telescope. Astronomer with the primary mirror of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET). Commissioned in late 1997, the HET has the worlds largest primary mirror

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Giant Magellan Telescope, artwork

Giant Magellan Telescope, artwork
Giant Magellan Telescope. Artwork of the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT), an optical telescope comprising 7 primary mirrors, each with a diameter of 8.4 metres

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Aerial view of observatories at Mauna Kea, Hawaii

Aerial view of observatories at Mauna Kea, Hawaii
Mauna Kea Observatories. Aerial view of astronomical observatories near the summit of Mauna Kea on Hawaii, USA. The observatories in the lower frame are (from bottom to top)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: 3. 5-metre optical telescope

3. 5-metre optical telescope
Optical telescope. 3.5-metre optical telescope at the Calar Alto Observatory near Almeria, southern Spain. The mounting (blue) supports the telescopes mirror

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Telescope domes at Kitt Peak Observatory

Telescope domes at Kitt Peak Observatory

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: 3. 5-metre optical telescope

3. 5-metre optical telescope
Optical telescope. 3.5-metre optical telescope at the Calar Alto Observatory, near Almeria, southern Spain. The mounting (blue) supports the telescopes mirror (not seen)

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Inside the dome of the WIYN telescope

Inside the dome of the WIYN telescope
WIYN telescope. Time exposure image of the dome interior of the WIYN (Wisconsin, Indiana, Yale, NOAO) telescope at the Kitt Peak observatory, USA

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Kew Observatory

Kew Observatory. Kew Observatory was built by Sir William Chambers for King George III to watch the transit of Venus (when Venus crosses the Suns face as seen from Earth) in 1769

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Telescope domes at the Kitt Peak Observatory

Telescope domes at the Kitt Peak Observatory
Kitt Peak Observatory. Some of the telescope domes at the Kitt Peak Observatory in Arizona, USA. The large dome holds the Mayall 4-metre telescope

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: 1. 5m telescope with laser, Starfire Optical Range

1. 5m telescope with laser, Starfire Optical Range
1.5m telescope with laser, Starfire Optical Range

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: 2. 2-metre optical telescope

2. 2-metre optical telescope
2.2-metre optical telescope

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: The dome of the Keck Telescope and star trails

The dome of the Keck Telescope and star trails
The dome of the Keck Telescope silhouetted against star trails centred on the Polaris star (bottom left). The Keck Telescope is the largest optical telescope in the world

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Checking the mirror for Large Binocular Telescope

Checking the mirror for Large Binocular Telescope
LBT mirror. Researcher Roger Angel with the mirror for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). This 8.4- metre telescope mirror is the largest ever cast

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Light-intensity camera

Light-intensity camera beneath its protective dome at the Poker Flat Research Range (PFRR), Alaska, USA. The telescope and attached instrumentation are used to measure the relative brightness of

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Telescope domes at the Kitt Peak Observatory

Telescope domes at the Kitt Peak Observatory

Background imageTelescopes Optical Collection: Astronomy & the optical spectrum

Astronomy & the optical spectrum
Astronomy and the optical spectrum. The optical range of the electromagnetic spectrum runs from wavelengths of 310 millionths of a metre (nano- metre, nm) to 1100 nanometres



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Telescopes Optical Collection

Telescopes Optical are an important tool in. They allow us to observe distant objects in the universe, such as stars, galaxies, and other celestial bodies. They use lenses or mirrors to collect light from a distant object and focus it onto a detector. This allows us to study the structure of these objects and learn more about them and are be used to measure distances between stars and galaxies, as well as detect planets orbiting other stars and can even be used for communication with spacecrafts that are too far away for radio waves to reach them. They have been instrumental in our understanding of the universe around us, providing invaluable data that has led to new discoveries about our place in the cosmos.
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Our beautiful pictures are available as Framed Prints, Photos, Wall Art and Photo Gifts

The Telescopes Optical collection from Media Storehouse offers a stunning array of wall art and framed prints that showcase the beauty and wonder of space exploration science. Featuring high-quality images captured by some of the world's most advanced telescopes, our collection includes breathtaking views of distant galaxies, nebulas, stars, and planets. Whether you're an astronomy enthusiast or simply appreciate the awe-inspiring beauty of our universe, these prints are sure to captivate your imagination. From colorful depictions of supernovas to detailed close-ups of planetary surfaces, each piece in our collection is a testament to humanity's ongoing quest for knowledge about our place in the cosmos. With a range of sizes and framing options available, these prints make excellent additions to any home or office decor. So why not bring a little bit of outer space into your life with the Telescopes Optical collection from Media Storehouse?
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What are Telescopes Optical (Space Exploration Science) art prints?

Telescopes Optical art prints are high-quality reproductions of stunning astronomical images captured by telescopes. These prints showcase the beauty and wonder of space, allowing viewers to appreciate the intricacies of our universe from a unique perspective. The images featured in these prints range from breathtaking views of distant galaxies to detailed close-ups of planets within our own solar system. These art prints are perfect for anyone with an interest in astronomy or space exploration, as well as those who simply appreciate beautiful artwork. They make great additions to any home or office, adding a touch of sophistication and intrigue to any room. We offer a wide selection of Telescopes Optical art prints, each printed on high-quality paper using state-of-the-art printing technology. With so many options available, there is sure to be a print that captures your imagination and inspires you every time you look at it.
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What Telescopes Optical (Space Exploration Science) art prints can I buy from Media Storehouse?

We offer a wide range of telescope optical (space exploration science) art prints that are perfect for space enthusiasts and collectors alike. You can choose from stunning images captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, as well as other telescopes used in space exploration missions. These prints showcase breathtaking views of galaxies, nebulae, stars, planets, and other celestial bodies. Whether you're looking for a beautiful piece to display in your home or office or searching for an educational tool to inspire young minds about the wonders of our universe, we have something for everyone. Our collection includes high-quality prints on various materials such as canvas and fine art paper. Some popular options include "Pillars of Creation" by Hubble Space Telescope and "The Orion Nebula" by Spitzer Space Telescope. With so many amazing choices available at Media Storehouse, you're sure to find the perfect telescope optical print that will leave you awestruck every time you look at it.
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How do I buy Telescopes Optical (Space Exploration Science) art prints?

To buy Telescopes Optical art prints from Media Storehouse, you can browse our online collection of images and select the ones that catch your eye. Once you have chosen the prints you want to purchase, add them to your cart and proceed to checkout. At this point, you will be asked for your shipping information and payment details. We offer a variety of sizes and framing options for their art prints, so make sure to choose the one that best suits your needs. We also offer a range of other space-themed products such as posters, canvas prints, and phone cases. If you have any questions or concerns about purchasing Telescopes Optical art prints from Media Storehouse, don't hesitate to reach out to our customer service team who will be happy to assist you with any queries or issues you may have.
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How much do Telescopes Optical (Space Exploration Science) art prints cost?

We offer a wide range of Telescopes Optical art prints that are available at varying prices. The cost of these prints will depend on factors such as the size, framing options and the type of paper used for printing. Our collection includes high-quality images captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and other space exploration missions. Our Telescopes Optical art prints are perfect for anyone who is interested in astronomy or wants to add a touch of outer space to their home or office decor. These stunning prints showcase the beauty and wonder of our universe, from distant galaxies to colorful nebulae. We take pride in offering affordable pricing without compromising on quality, ensuring that everyone can enjoy these breathtaking works of art. Whether you're looking for a small print or a large canvas, we have something to suit every budget and taste.
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How will my Telescopes Optical (Space Exploration Science) art prints be delivered to me?

We take great care in delivering your Telescopes Optical art prints to you. We use high-quality packaging materials to ensure that your print arrives in perfect condition. Your print will be carefully rolled and placed into a sturdy tube for protection during transit. We work with trusted delivery partners who have years of experience in handling delicate items like artwork. Once your order is dispatched, you will receive an email notification with tracking information so that you can keep track of its progress. We understand the importance of timely delivery and strive to get your order to you as quickly as possible without compromising on quality or safety. Our team is always available to answer any questions or concerns you may have about your order. Rest assured that when you purchase from us, your Telescopes Optical art prints will be delivered safely and securely right to your doorstep.