What if you could see stars being born and galaxies dancing — from a camera floating in space?

Hubble Space Telescope: Earth's Eye in the Sky!

The amazing story of how we launched a giant camera into space

We launched a bus-sized telescope into space that takes the most amazing photos of the universe!

Imagine having the world's most powerful camera — but instead of taking selfies, it photographs galaxies millions of light-years away! That's exactly what happened on April 24, 1990, when NASA launched the Hubble Space Telescope!

The Space Shuttle Discovery blasted off with five brave astronauts and a very special passenger — a telescope the size of a school bus! Hubble weighs about 24,500 pounds. That's heavier than two elephants!

But why put a telescope in space? Great question! Here on Earth, our atmosphere (that's the air all around us) makes stars look blurry — kind of like trying to see clearly underwater. But up in space, there's no atmosphere to get in the way!

Here's a funny part of the story: when Hubble first started sending pictures back, they were... blurry! Oh no! Scientists discovered a tiny problem with Hubble's mirror — it was off by just 1/50th the width of a human hair! Three years later, astronauts flew up and fixed it like space mechanics.

💡 Hubble has traveled more than 4 billion miles around Earth — that's like going to Neptune and back!