870 Micron Observations of Nearby 3CRR Radio Galaxies
A dichotomy in the orientation of dust and radio jets in nearby low-power radio galaxies
A kiloparsec-scale internal shock collision in the jet of a nearby radio galaxy
A Multi-Wavelength Spectral and Polarimetric Study of the Jet of 3C 264
A multi-wavelength test of the FR I-BL Lac unifying model
A transition in the accretion properties of radio-loud active nuclei
Circumnuclear Dust in Luminous Early-type Galaxies. I. Sample Properties and Stellar Luminosity Models
Face-on Dust Disks in Galaxies with Optical Jets
Hubble Space Telescope Near-infrared Snapshot Survey of 3CR Radio Source Counterparts. II. An Atlas and Inventory of the Host Galaxies, Mergers, and Companions
Hubble Space Telescope Near-infrared Snapshot Survey of 3CR Radio Source Counterparts. III. Radio Galaxies and Quasars in Context
Molecular Gas in the X-Ray Bright Group NGC 5044 as Revealed by ALMA
Nuclear Gas and Dust Disks in Nearby 3CR Elliptical Galaxies
Optical nuclei of radio-loud AGN and the Fanaroff-Riley divide
Radio AGN in the local universe: unification, triggering and evolution
Radio, optical and X-ray nuclei in nearby 3CRR radio galaxies
Rotation Measures Across Parsec-Scale Jets of Fanaroff-Riley Type I Radio Galaxies
Spitzer Observations of Transient, Extended Dust in Two Elliptical Galaxies: New Evidence of Recent Feedback Energy Release in Galactic Cores
The HST view of FR I radio galaxies: evidence for non-thermal nuclear sources
The Interaction between Radio Lobes and Hot Gas in the Nearby Radio Galaxies 3C 285 and 3C 442A
The Presence of Thermally Unstable X-Ray Filaments and the Production of Cold Gas in the NGC 5044 Group
X-Ray Constraints on Galaxy-Gas-Jet Interactions in the Dumbbell Galaxies NGC 4782 and NGC 4783 in the LGG 316 Galaxy Group
Instrument
WFPC2, WFPC2/PC
Temporal Coverage
1996-04-20T02:17:16Z/1997-03-10T05:09:34Z
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.