
Extraordinary images from the Euclid space telescope have captured 26 million galaxies, some as far off as 10.5 billion light years.
Euclid was launched by the European Space Agency (ESA) in July 2023 and sent back its first images in November that year. During a six-year mission, it will image about one-third of the sky, building the most detailed 3D map of the cosmos ever created. Once complete, this survey will help to illuminate how聽dark matter and dark energy behave on cosmic scales.
ESA has now released , beginning with three 鈥渄eep fields鈥 鈥 areas where the telescope will peer in more detail than in the rest of its survey area. These three spots represent just 63 square degrees of sky, an area equivalent to that covered by the full moon 300 times over. In the coming years, Euclid will pass over these regions between 30 and 52 times, building up an ever more detailed image.
Advertisement
at the University of Waterloo in Canada says the current batch of images is less than half a per cent of what Euclid will gather over the mission, but there is already plenty for researchers to work with. 鈥淔or a lot of individual galaxies and their properties, there鈥檚 so much science you can do, and that鈥檚 because nobody has done a space-based survey in the near infrared and the optical like this before,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not quite the same quality as HST [the Hubble Space Telescope], but it鈥檚 very close, and we鈥檙e not just pointing and shooting at individual objects 鈥 we鈥檙e doing a survey.鈥
Researchers have already used the Euclid data to find hundreds of strong gravitational lenses. These phenomena are formed when the gravity of an object in the foreground distorts light from a distant galaxy, creating an arc shape or even a full ring. Previously, scientists had to hunt these down individually and get HST to point at them and collect more images. Now astronomers can search the survey data from Euclid and find many at once, which will help gather insights into the evolution of galaxies and the universe.
Using an AI model, researchers were able to find and catalogue 500 galaxies with strong gravitational lensing in this first batch of data alone, doubling the total found to date. 鈥淭he statistics are phenomenal,鈥 says Percival. 鈥淓uclid鈥檚 going to get 200 times this amount of data in the end.鈥
The data released so far represents just a single week of images from Euclid, but it adds up to some 35 terabytes 鈥 the equivalent of 200 days of high-quality video streaming. The next batch of data, due to be released late next year, will be a whole year鈥檚 worth of images covering 2000 square degrees and requiring more than 2000 terabytes of storage space.
Looking at each galaxy manually could take over a hundred years, so AI has been used to massively speed up the process, says at the University of Toronto. 鈥淲e can ask new questions in weeks, rather than years,鈥 he says.
The world capital of astronomy: Chile
Experience the astronomical highlights of Chile. Visit some of the world's most technologically advanced observatories and stargaze beneath some of the clearest skies on earth.