news.bbc.co.uk — A team of astronomers from the US and the UK has obtained some of the clearest pictures of space ever taken. They were acquired using a new "adaptive optics" system which sharpens pictures taken from the Mount Palomar Observatory in California. The images are twice as sharp as those from Hubble Space Telescope.
Sep 3, 2007 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountSep 3, 2007
Scientinst also trained the powerful lenses on John Edwards head but were unable to find a brain.
fultonlaSep 3, 2007
it's on the moon?
gigglestickSep 4, 2007
It's not his fault. He learnt all his astronomy from Pink Floyd while high.
artzealotSep 4, 2007
Dugg down for bad sense of humor.
dardoushSep 4, 2007
It look like a flower to me, not cat's eye
madbadgerSep 4, 2007
taken by the Hubble:<a class="user" href="http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/wallpaper3/opo9501c.jpg">http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/wallpaper3/opo9501c.jpg</a>
madbadgerSep 4, 2007
Probably because it's being reported by a mainstream news media such as BBC or CNN. The editors don't know much about certain subjects, and they think it's a new discovery.
rub3sSep 4, 2007
But can it see Bowie's in space?