WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:16.140 --> 00:00:20.540 When we look up at the night sky, we can only see a small percentage of the stars that are around us. 2 00:00:21.000 --> 00:00:23.300 That's because our eyes can only see so far. 3 00:00:28.840 --> 00:00:33.840 Telescopes on earth have helped us get a better view of the stars by collecting more light than our eyes can see 4 00:00:34.400 --> 00:00:36.100 allowing us to see even further. 5 00:00:40.920 --> 00:00:44.420 But the view from those telescopes gets distorted by Earth's atmosphere. 6 00:00:44.900 --> 00:00:46.820 That's why we see the stars twinkle. 7 00:00:50.420 --> 00:00:52.620 To get rid of the distortion of the atmosphere, 8 00:00:53.020 --> 00:00:55.670 astronomers imagine building a telescope 9 00:00:55.900 --> 00:00:58.590 the size of a school bus to go into space. 10 00:00:59.420 --> 00:01:03.820 The result was the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990. 11 00:01:07.160 --> 00:01:11.320 Today it orbits the Earth, 340 miles above the surface. 12 00:01:16.360 --> 00:01:20.660 Many of the galaxies Hubble photographs are millions of light-years away from Earth. 13 00:01:26.840 --> 00:01:29.640 Light-years are a measurement for distance in space, 14 00:01:29.860 --> 00:01:33.270 related to the time it takes light to travel from one place to another. 15 00:01:33.900 --> 00:01:36.670 A light-year is the distance light travels in one year. 16 00:01:38.180 --> 00:01:42.880 Hubble photographed the Whirlpool Galaxy that is 25 million light-years away from Earth. 17 00:01:46.400 --> 00:01:50.700 The light from that Galaxy took 25 million years to travel to Earth. 18 00:01:51.400 --> 00:01:54.740 This means that the light Hubble sees from the Whirlpool Galaxy, 19 00:01:55.000 --> 00:01:56.800 is 25 million years old. 20 00:02:01.920 --> 00:02:04.270 We aren't seeing the Galaxy as it exists today. 21 00:02:05.560 --> 00:02:07.660 We're seeing the Galaxy as it existed 22 00:02:08.000 --> 00:02:09.720 25 million years ago. 23 00:02:12.620 --> 00:02:15.420 A Hubble astronomer had a really interesting idea 24 00:02:16.020 --> 00:02:19.120 to point Hubble at an apparently blank spot of sky 25 00:02:19.800 --> 00:02:21.340 to see what we could see. 26 00:02:24.520 --> 00:02:26.410 That empty patch of sky 27 00:02:26.620 --> 00:02:29.450 turned out to be filled with galaxies, 28 00:02:29.600 --> 00:02:32.110 much more distant than we'd ever seen before. 29 00:02:32.580 --> 00:02:35.020 Some of the galaxies were baby galaxies, 30 00:02:35.210 --> 00:02:38.730 born just after the creation of the universe and the Big Bang. 31 00:02:42.940 --> 00:02:45.640 The universe is a never-ending source of wonder 32 00:02:46.060 --> 00:02:50.730 largely because of the things the Hubble Space Telescope has taught us during its years in space. 33 00:02:56.160 --> 00:02:57.860 Hubble studies our own solar system, 34 00:02:58.750 --> 00:03:00.090 like storms on Mars, 35 00:03:02.180 --> 00:03:03.180 the rings of Saturn, 36 00:03:05.680 --> 00:03:07.240 and aurora on Jupiter. 37 00:03:10.060 --> 00:03:12.260 Hubble also photographs the birth and death of stars, 38 00:03:18.200 --> 00:03:21.530 and has uncovered thousands of new galaxies in the universe.