A Census of Optically Dark Massive Galaxies in the Early Universe from Magnification by Lensing Galaxy Clusters
ALMA Lensing Cluster Survey: Full Spectral Energy Distribution Analysis of z ~ 0.5-6 Lensed Galaxies Detected with millimeter Observations
An Exquisitely Deep View of Quenching Galaxies through the Gravitational Lens: Stellar Population, Morphology, and Ionized Gas
Cluster-galaxy weak lensing
Evidence for anisotropic quenching in massive galaxy clusters at z 0.5
Evidence for Ubiquitous High-equivalent-width Nebular Emission in z ~ 7 Galaxies: Toward a Clean Measurement of the Specific Star-formation Rate Using a Sample of Bright, Magnified Galaxies
Extensive Lensing Survey of Optical and Near-infrared Dark Objects (El Sonido): HST H-faint Galaxies behind 101 Lensing Clusters
Jellyfish galaxy candidates in MACS J0717.5+3745 and 39 other clusters of the DAFT/FADA and CLASH surveys
JVLA 1.5 GHz Continuum Observation of CLASH Clusters. I. Radio Properties of the BCGs
Ly a emission strength and stellar properties of faint galaxies from 5 < z < 8.2
M32 Analogs? A Population of Massive Ultra-compact Dwarf and Compact Elliptical Galaxies in Intermediate-redshift Clusters
Multiband Galaxy Morphologies for CLASH: A Convolutional Neural Network Transferred from CANDELS
Multicomponent DHOST analysis in galaxy clusters
Shapes and alignments of dark matter haloes and their brightest cluster galaxies in 39 strong lensing clusters
Star Formation in Intermediate Redshift 0.2 < z < 0.7 Brightest Cluster Galaxies
Star Formation, Nebulae, and Active Galactic Nuclei in CLASH Brightest Cluster Galaxies. I. Dependence on Core Entropy of Intracluster Medium
The impact of satellite trails on Hubble Space Telescope observations
The missing light of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Weak lensing shear estimation beyond the shape-noise limit: a machine learning approach
Instrument
ACS, ACS/WFC, WFC3, WFC3/IR, WFC3/UVIS
Temporal Coverage
2012-11-30T09:56:45Z/2013-02-13T17:31:45Z
Version
1.0
Mission Description
Launched in 1990, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope remains the premier UV and visible light telescope in orbit. With well over 1.6 million observations from 10 different scientific instruments, the ESA Hubble Science Archive is a treasure trove of astronomical data to be exploited.
European Space Agency, Postman et al., 2013, 'Through a Lens, Darkly - New Constraints on the Fundamental Components of the Cosmos', 1.0, European Space Agency, https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-7zr87rc