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Hubble Sees True Shapes of Galaxies 11 Billion Years Back in Time

The Hubble Sequence Throughout the Universe's History
This image shows "slices" of the universe at different times throughout its history (present day, and at 4 billion and 11 billion years ago). Each slice goes further back in time, showing how galaxies of each type appear. The shape is that of the Hubble tuning-fork diagram,...

Looking 11 billion years back in time to when the universe was very young, astronomers have found that the anatomy of distant galaxies is not that different from galaxies seen in the nearby universe today. The results come from the Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS). The largest project in the history of Hubble, it aims to explore galactic evolution in the early universe, and the very first seeds of cosmic structure at less than 1 billion years after the Big Bang.

Previous studies of this early epoch were inconclusive because they were limited to visible light. Because of the stretching of light by the expansion of the universe the visible light detected in distant galaxies actually maps only the ultraviolet emissions of the galaxies. Because this radiation only comes from regions of active star formation the galaxies appeared to be clumpy and messy, with no resemblance to the galaxy shapes we see around us today. By observing the galaxies in infrared light with Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3, astronomers could observe how these distant galaxies would appear normally in visible light if their radiation were not stretched to infrared wavelengths by the expanding universe.

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Last Updated
Mar 20, 2025
Contact
Media

Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov

Credits

Illustration: NASA, ESA, and M. Kornmesser (ESO);
Science: NASA, ESA, and B. Lee, M. Giavalisco, and C. Williams (University of Massachusetts), Y. Guo (University of California, Santa Cruz), J. Lotz (STScI), A. van der Wel (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy), H. Ferguson (STScI), S. Faber (University of California, Santa Cruz), A. Koekemoer and N. Grogin (STScI), D. Kocevski (University of Kentucky), C. Conselice (University of Nottingham), S. Wuyts (Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics), A. Dekel (The Hebrew University), J. Kartaltepe (Nataional Observatory Astronomy Observatory), and E. Bell (University of Michigan)