Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of Globular Clusters in Two Face-On Low Surface Brightness Galaxies UGC 5981 and UGC 6614
The Opacity of Spiral Galaxy Disks. IV. Radial Extinction Profiles from Counts of Distant Galaxies Seen through Foreground Disks
The opacity of spiral galaxy disks. V. Dust opacity, HI distributions and sub-mm emission
The opacity of spiral galaxy disks. VI. Extinction, stellar light and color
The Opacity of Spiral Galaxy Disks. VIII. Structure of the Cold ISM
The opacity of spiral galaxy disks. VII. The accuracy of galaxy counts as an extinction probe
Instrument
STIS/CCD, WFPC2, WFPC2/PC
Temporal Coverage
2000-03-23T13:18:48Z/2000-05-13T16:19:54Z
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, Miller comma Bryan, 2001, 'Globular Clusters of Low Surface Brightness Galaxies', 1.0, European Space Agency, https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-nbrxkf2