Hubble Space Telescope: Difference between revisions
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===''The Last Knight'' film=== | ===''The Last Knight'' film=== | ||
A television screen in the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|British Prime Minister]]'s office showed images of [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]] coming from the | A television screen in the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|British Prime Minister]]'s office showed images of [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]] coming from the Hubble Space Telescope which were credited as coming from [[ESA]], which jointly operated the telescope with [[NASA]]. {{storylink|Transformers: The Last Knight (film)|The Last Knight}} | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
*The real Hubble does not work that way. Under ideal conditions, it can resolve Martian objects about 12 miles wide. So that's one huge Bumblebee, or one extremely Transformer technology-enhanced telescope. | *The real Hubble does not work that way. Under ideal conditions, it can resolve Martian objects about 20 kilometres (≈ 12 miles) wide. So that's one huge Bumblebee, or one extremely Transformer technology-enhanced telescope. | ||
==External link== | ==External link== | ||
Revision as of 04:10, 29 November 2023
The Hubble Space Telescope is a big tube in orbit around Earth. It apparently has unfathomably acute visual resolution, as it can show details as small as a few inches wide from a distance of tens of millions of miles.
Fiction
IDW movie comics
In 2003, an unknown agency used the Hubble Space Telescope to produce routine images of the surface of Mars. One batch of images, however, showed a smoldering impact crater, and upon further resolution showed a slightly blurry robotic figure standing on the planet's surface. The information was promptly passed on to Sector Seven, who prepared to "welcome" the newly-arrived visitor. Movie Prequel #2
The Last Knight film
A television screen in the British Prime Minister's office showed images of Cybertron coming from the Hubble Space Telescope which were credited as coming from ESA, which jointly operated the telescope with NASA. The Last Knight
Notes
- The real Hubble does not work that way. Under ideal conditions, it can resolve Martian objects about 20 kilometres (≈ 12 miles) wide. So that's one huge Bumblebee, or one extremely Transformer technology-enhanced telescope.
External link
- Hubble Space Telescope at Wikipedia

