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FOR RELEASE: August 27, 1998

PHOTO NO.: STScI-PRC98-27

FAR-FLUNG GALAXY CLUSTERS MAY REVEAL FATE OF UNIVERSE

A selection of NASA Hubble Space Telescope snapshots of huge galaxy
clusters that lie far away and far back in time. These are selected from
a catalog of 92 new clusters uncovered during a six-year Hubble
observing program known as the Medium Deep Survey.

If the distances and masses of the clusters are confirmed by ground
based telescopes, the survey may hold clues to how galaxies quickly
formed into massive large-scale structures after the big bang, and what
that may mean for the eventual fate of the expanding universe.

The images are each a combination of two exposures in yellow and deep
red taken with Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. Each
cluster's distance is inferred from the reddening of the starlight,
which is due to the expansion of space. Astronomers assume these
clusters all formed early in the history of the universe.


HST133617-00529 (left)
This collection of spiral and elliptical galaxies lies an estimated 4
to 6 billion light-years away. It is in the constellation of Virgo not
far from the 3rd magnitude star Zeta Virginis. The brighter galaxies in
this cluster have red magnitudes between 20 and 22 near the limit of the
Palomar Sky Survey. The bright blue galaxy (upper left) is probably a
foreground galaxy, and not a cluster member. The larger of the galaxies
in the cluster are probably about the size of our Milky Way Galaxy. The
diagonal line at lower right is an artificial satellite trail.

HST002013+28366 (upper right)
This cluster of galaxies lies in the constellation of Andromeda a few
degrees from the star Alpheratz in the northeast corner of the
constellation Pegasus. It is at an estimated distance of 4 billion
light-years, which means the light we are seeing from the cluster is as
it appeared when the universe was roughly 2/3 of its present age.

HST035528+09435 (lower right)
At an estimated distance of about 7 to 10 billion light-years (z=1),
this is one of the farthest clusters in the Hubble sample. The cluster
lies in the constellation of Taurus.

Credit: K. Ratnatunga, R. Griffiths (Carnegie Mellon University); and
NASA