Hubble's Hidden Treasures Unveiled

Hubble's Hidden Treasures Unveiled

The top 10 images selected in the Hubble Hidden Treasures basic imaging category. Top row: NGC 6300 by Brian Campbell, V* PV Cephei by Alexey Romashin, IRAS 14568-6304 by Luca Limatola, NGC 1579 by Kathlyn Smith, B 1608+656 by Adam Kill Bottom row: NGC 4490 by Kathy van Pelt, NGC 6153 by Ralf Schoofs, NGC 6153 by Matej Novak, NGC 7814 by Gavrila Alexandru, NGC 7026 by Linda Morgan-O’Connor Credit: NASA & ESA

Josh Lake of the United States won with this awesome image of NGC 1763, part of the N11 star-forming region of the Large Magellanic Cloud.

Messier 77 produced by Andre van der Hoeven, of the Netherlands came in a close second.

Judy Schmidt of the United States entered this image of XZ Tauri, a new star lighting up a nearby cloud of gas and dust. She entered several images into the contest.

Revealing the challenge of many Hubble mosaics, the jury was impressed with the technical achievement Renaud Houdinet showed in putting together this ambitious view. He called this "The Great Mosaic Disaster in Chamaeleon. "Sometimes, things don't turn out as they ought," Houdinet admits on the Flickr description. Chamaeleon 1 is a large nebula near the south celestial pole and was not covered in one single Hubble image.

Robert Gendler took fifth place with an image of spiral galaxy Messier 96. You may know Gendler's work as his version of Hubble's image of NGC 3190 is the default image on the desktop of new Apple computers.

  • Hubble's Hidden Treasures

  • Hidden Treasures image processing Flickr group

  • Hidden Treasures basic imaging Flickr group

  • John Williams