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I think that makes sense, my english aint gr8

2007-03-13 02:24:06 · 9 answers · asked by cheekychap432 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

9 answers

There's not really a single image, but the project you want to learn more about is the Sloan Digital Sky Survey...for their ambitious mission is to map as much of the universe as they can.

http://www.sdss.org/

The following link shows "pie section" images of the large-scale structure of the universe...but they're not the kind of pretty pictures you normally see.

http://astro.uchicago.edu/~grodnick/gallery/lss/lss.html

By the way, the English you used in your question is fine...though I would suggest avoiding the "gr8" style of spelling.

2007-03-13 05:37:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

im not sure exactly what you are asking but ill give it a shot. there is an image called the hubble ultra deepfield, this image shows galaxies at the edge of the known universe some 14 billion light years away. the only other thing i can think of is that the earth is part of the universe and anyone who takes an image of it with the widest angle lens would be taking a picture that shows as much of the universe an image can show!

2007-03-13 02:30:13 · answer #2 · answered by Bones 3 · 0 0

It does make sense, but it wouldn't make sense to make an image like that; or at least not to feel the need to print it out. All you would see is a vast darkness because all we know about the universe is tiny compared to the universe itself, and for all of it to fit on one page - even if it was a A1 page - would be impossible if you would actually want to be able to see any of the galaxies we've discovered so far. They'd be even less than little white spots on that piece of paper.

And no household computer is strong enough to run a program that shows that 'image'.

2007-03-13 05:18:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Look at the sky any clear night.
That is what you would see if we tried to put the entire known universe in a single image.
Each time we look in a telescope we get an image of a very small portion of the universe. Small in terms of the portion of the sky that is observed but the objects we see are extremely large compared to things here on earth.

2007-03-13 02:35:45 · answer #4 · answered by anonimous 6 · 0 0

you're conflating biology with astronomy. Creationists in many circumstances have self belief that extraterrestrial beings created life in the worldwide, and a great style of trust evolution regardless of this. there is not any reason the Universe ought to no longer have been created with all of this mild already vacationing at this perspective. mild would not "age"; it merely turns into weaker and strategies a horizontal wave front.

2016-12-14 17:52:48 · answer #5 · answered by hannigan 4 · 0 0

PLZ VISITE THIS SITE



http://books.google.com/books?q=Is+there+an+image+that+shows+as+much+as+the+universe+we+have+ever+seen%3F&ots=uPlP-mhdxq&sa=X&oi=print&ct=title

2007-03-13 02:27:16 · answer #6 · answered by syscorner 1 · 0 0

go to the Hubble site and there is an image that is called the Hubble deep field. It took 1,000,000 seconds for the exposure.

2007-03-13 11:06:48 · answer #7 · answered by paulbritmolly 4 · 0 0

look up chandra, it takes xrays of the universe, theres some pretty cool pics

2007-03-13 02:26:59 · answer #8 · answered by terry s 2 · 0 0

http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/universe
http://www.redorbit.com/images/iod/?category_id=3
http://www.space.com/universe/

2007-03-13 02:34:39 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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