"Herschel-Hubble Telescope View of M51 Galaxy"
"The European Space Agency (Esa) has released a stunning image of the spiral galaxy M51, otherwise known as the Whirlpool Galaxy. It is a composite of images taken by Europe's Herschel space observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. The picture combines views of the galaxy captured at visible and far-infrared wavelengths. It highlights the cool, dusty and gaseous regions of M51, where the process of star formation is underway.

Herschel's full wavelength range spans 55 to 672 microns. Observations at longer wavelengths do not produce images with resolutions as high as those obtained at shorter wavelengths, such as the visible light detected by Hubble. However, Herschel's mirror is the largest infrared astronomy mirror ever launched into space, so it can take the sharpest pictures to date at the wavelengths it observes. And astronomers need to view objects at a range of wavelengths to get a full understanding of the processes taking place in those phenomena. Herschel and Hubble make a powerful combination. The Whirlpool Galaxy lies relatively nearby, about 35 million light-years away in the constellation Canes Venatici."
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