What is the Universe expanding into..

Do you think there was anything before the big bang?

  • I don't think there was anything before the Big Bang

    Votes: 56 12.5%
  • I think something existed before the Big Bang

    Votes: 200 44.7%
  • I don't think the big bang happened

    Votes: 54 12.1%
  • I think the universe is part of a mutiverse

    Votes: 201 45.0%

  • Total voters
    447
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I recall early on during Hubble's initial deployment that apparently deep space is obscured by the crowded forefront of objects and stars within our own galaxy. I should have said deep space rather than the Milky Way. So Scientists focused in on a small passage through which deep space can be observed.

I was wrong once before 😳
 
How deep do you want Hubble to go?

P.S. The JWST will go even deeper!
 

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... the limitations presented to Hubble ...

One limitation of Hubble is that it orbits the Earth.

Sometimes, targets that astronomers would like Hubble to observe are obstructed by the Earth itself as Hubble orbits. This can limit the time spent observing a given object.

The James Webb Space Telescope, because it doesn't orbit the Earth, will have an unobstructed view of the Universe.
 
I clearly don't understand the question! Please give me a reference to what the scientific community has to say about this "effective window".

What I have managed to discover is that the different instruments on the Hubble have different fields of view.

(The field of view is the area of the sky an instrument can observe at any given time.)

The primary near-infrared camera of the JWST has a field of view of 2.2 x 2.2 arcminutes which is comparable to the 2.7 x 2.7 arcminutes of the the Hubble wide field camera 3.

(The diameter of the full moon as seen from Earth is 31 arcminutes.)
 
It seems obvious to me that neither telescope can see through walls, so I don't see what all the fuss is about!

P.S. Infrared light can penetrate cosmic dust better than visible light. Hence the JWST is less limited in its ability to see through cosmic dust and hence will see further into the universe than Hubble.
 
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