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  1. [...] Images [Via Scoble] Posted: Apr 25 2007, 01:29 AM by gerlach | with no [...]

  2. aiusepsi says:

    What I find incredible is the ultra deep field image. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:HUDF.jpg)

    It shows a region of the sky smaller than a grain of sand held at arm’s length, but it contains about 10,000 galaxies, each of them holding about as many stars as our own, which itself holds a staggeringly vast number.

  3. Andrew Simpson says:

    What I find incredible is the ultra deep field image. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:HUDF.jpg)

    It shows a region of the sky smaller than a grain of sand held at arm’s length, but it contains about 10,000 galaxies, each of them holding about as many stars as our own, which itself holds a staggeringly vast number.

  4. Ole Begemann says:

    “Reminds me of how little we actually know about the system we’re a part of.”

    Awesome. When I see those images, I have to think how incredible it is how *much* we actually do know about the universe. I just read a book about the string theory and regardless of whether it will turn out to be true in the end, it’s absolutely fascinating how scientists deduct facts about black holes and the Big Bang from theories about the subatomic structure of the smallest particles.

  5. Ole Begemann says:

    “Reminds me of how little we actually know about the system we’re a part of.”

    Awesome. When I see those images, I have to think how incredible it is how *much* we actually do know about the universe. I just read a book about the string theory and regardless of whether it will turn out to be true in the end, it’s absolutely fascinating how scientists deduct facts about black holes and the Big Bang from theories about the subatomic structure of the smallest particles.