A Wide-Field Hubble Space Telescope Study of the Cluster Cl 0024+1654 at z=0.4. II. The Cluster Mass Distribution
A Wide-Field Hubble Space Telescope Study of the Cluster Cl 0024+16 at z = 0.4. I. Morphological Distributions to 5 Mpc Radius
A Wide-Field Hubble Space Telescope Survey of the Cluster Cl 0024+16 at z = 0.4. III. Spectroscopic Signatures of Environmental Evolution in Early-Type Galaxies
A Wide-Field Survey of Two z ~ 0.5 Galaxy Clusters: Identifying the Physical Processes Responsible for the Observed Transformation of Spirals into S0s
Dynamical Evidence for Environmental Evolution of Intermediate-Redshift Spiral Galaxies
Environmental Effects in the Evolution of Galactic Bulges
Evolution since z = 1 of the Morphology-Density Relation for Galaxies
GALEX Observations of Passive Spirals in the Cluster Cl 0024+17: Clues to the Formation of S0 Galaxies
Merger-driven Growth of Intermediate-mass Black Holes: Constraints from Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of Hyper-luminous X-Ray Sources
On the Evolution of the Molecular Gas Fraction of Star-Forming Galaxies
The Dynamical Distinction between Elliptical and Lenticular Galaxies in Distant Clusters: Further Evidence for the Recent Origin of S0 Galaxies
The evolving galaxy population of cluster Cl0024+1654
The spatially resolved dynamics of dusty starburst galaxies in a z ~ 0.4 cluster: beginning the transition from spirals to S0s
The Survival of Dark Matter Halos in the Cluster Cl 0024+16
The Tully-Fisher Relation in Cluster Cl 0024+1654 at z=0.4
XMM-Newton study of the lensing cluster of galaxies CL 0024+17
Instrument
STIS/CCD, WFPC2, WFPC2/PC
Temporal Coverage
2000-09-14T18:04:13Z/2001-09-11T02:13:55Z
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, Ellis et al., 2007, 'The Role of Dark Matter in Cluster Formation and Galaxy Evolution', 1.0, European Space Agency, https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-7zktzfr