The universe is on display like never before thanks to a new set of images released by NASA.
There are five areas of space that researchers agreed to target.
The veil was pulled back on the second star in the Southern Ring Nebula using mid-IR wavelength.
The star's companion is periodically ejected layers of gas and dust. The swirling duo have created a fantastic landscape.
There is a new image showing the nebula. NASA says that if we could see it from its edge, it would look like two bowls placed together at the bottom, opening away from one another.
A giant planet outside our solar system is called WASP-96 b. The planet is 1,150 light-years away from Earth. It is half the mass of Jupiter and was discovered in 2004.
A spectrum analysis of WASP-96 b's atmosphere was released by the agency but not a photo.
Knicole Colon, a research astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said that the analysis found the chemical fingerprints of water in the atmosphere.
One day after a jaw-dropping first image was published by NASA and the White House, the trove of images comes.
The first image shows the First Deep Field.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said on Monday that if you held a grain of sand on the tip of your finger, it would be the part of the universe you are seeing.
There are many specks. Earthlings are getting a more detailed look at distant galaxies thanks to the telescope.
The first image shows thousands of galaxies with structures that are faint and diffuse.
It took NASA weeks to get to the depths of the Hubble Space Telescope's deepest fields.
Some of the galaxies are more than 13 billion years old, which means they formed quickly after the Big bang.
The snapshot from 4.5 billion years ago is what the image of SMACS-0723 is.
NASA says that researchers will use the data from the telescope to learn more about the universe.
The culmination of an international program is the space telescope. The Canadian Space Agency is a partner.