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The visualization shows a small part of a region called the Extended Groth Strip, covering 5,000 galaxies and zooming in toward the distant Maisie's galaxy. Skip to main content.
Peering through a tiny strip of sky, astronomers are looking back over half the age of our universe to times when galaxies were young. Their goal i Skip to main content Skip to main menu Skip to ...
The strip provides something of a clean window into the deep universe. "The Extended Groth Strip is a region of the sky that has now become one of the premier JWST fields," said Kirkpatrick.
A team of researchers scrutinizing the Extended Groth Strip, a region of space between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes, saw fewer growing supermassive black holes and less dust than they ...
The visualization focuses heavily on a region of space known as the Extended Groth Strip, which was first imaged back in 2004 and 2005 by the Hubble Space Telescope, Webb’s predecessor.
The video is the result of data collected by the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey (CEERS) and explores a region of space called the Extended Groth Strip. The Extended Groth Strip is ...
"The Extended Groth Strip is a region of the sky that has now become one of the premier JWST fields,” Kirkpatrick said. “Within this region, we're able to see about 10,000 galaxies — even ...
The structure was revealed at a redshift of 3.44, in the Extended Groth Strip (EGS) field observed with JWST. The observations were complemented by data from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST).
"The Extended Groth Strip is a region of the sky that has now become one of the premier JWST fields," said Kirkpatrick. "Within this region, we're able to see about 10,000 galaxies—even though ...
Exploring the Extended Groth Strip The team applied the JWST's infrared observing power to a galaxy-rich strip of space located near the constellation of Ursa Major, called the Extended Groth Strip.