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Notice

If you are working on press-worthy science that relates to HST, we invite you to share your work with the Hubble News team 

HST staff will be at the STScI booth and offer help as well!

Hubble Events at the 244th AAS Meeting

LocationTitle Date and Time (MDT)

Ballroom C

NASA Town Hall

This Town Hall session will provide an opportunity for the Astrophysics science community to interact with members of the leadership team and staff of the Astrophysics Division (APD) of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.

Monday, Jan. 8 2024: 12:45-13:45 CT in the Great Hall A

Room 215

STScI Town Hall 

The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) serves the astronomical community through the operation of multiple NASA flagship missions including the Hubble, Webb, and Roman Space Telescopes, the development of advanced data and science archives, including Kepler and TESS, and the dissemination of astronomical information to the broadest public audiences.

  • A report on the status of our existing and upcoming missions and describe new opportunities designed to advance astrophysics through the 2020s.
  • An update on the definition of the Roman Core Community Surveys.
  • Progress reports on the Exoplanet and Long-term Monitoring Strategic Initiatives with HST and JWST The presenters will include STScI science leads and community representatives.

Tuesday, Jan 9 2024: 12:45-13:45 CT 

Room 229

Press Release Includes HST result

Tuesday, Jan 9 2024: 3:15-4:15 CT in 

Room 215

JWST Town Hall

This JWST Town Hall will update the community about the performance of the observatory, review the status of science operations including proposal process and data analysis, summarize efforts to receive and act on the science community feedback, and provide a summary description of Cycle 2 approved proposals as well as the submitted Cycle 3 proposals. 

Wednesday, Jan. 10 2024 18:00 PM - 19:30 PM CT

Room 207

Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope

This session will cover the status of the project and upcoming opportunities for community involvement in planning and executing the science and technology demonstration aspects of Roman.

Thursday, Jan. 11 2024 12:45 PM 13:45 PM CT 





Hubble Resources 

STScI Hubble Space Telescope Main Website Home

Find out most information about HST, from general to specific technical information

This link is for the Main HST Website at STScI with links to Instrument pages, Proposal preparation, HST Documentation and other material

Hubble Space Telescope Booklet

This brief booklet provides a current overview of the scientific and technical capabilities of the HST instrument suite. A few hard copies are available at the meeting, and it also is linked from the HST Website. 

HST Instruments


HST Documentation

HST Documentation includes Proposal Preparation Materials, Instrument Handbooks, Data Reduction and Archive information, User and Special Reports and news on Community Initiatives. It is a comprehensive guide, from idea to publication, about the HST observing cycle.

HST Instrument Slide set for AAS

Click the above image to see all the Instrument slide sets with highlights of technical information.

HST Cycle 31 is in Progress (Started December 1, 2023

Find Cycle 31 information including the Approved Programs list, the Abstract Catalog and the Exposure Catalog

The STScI Newsletter Volume 40, #2 describes the Program Selection Process and statistics on submitted and approved programs


HST Gallery and Press releases

All HST Press Releases are available with full resolution and rescaled images and links to science papers.

Galleries of Images and Videos are available for your use. Please use the appropriate credit line.

Contact the Hubble News team with  press-worthy HST science 



Come and Find Us in the Exhibit Hall!


Contact us with questions

The HST Help Desk at STScI is available for help also!    help@stsci.edu 



How to Connect With Us

STScI

Visit the STScI Booth in the exhibit hall, come to the Town Hall Tuesday, Jan 9 2024: 12:45-13:45 CT in room 215. Also check out the HST related presentations in AAS sessions, or contact the HST Help Desk at STScI.

NASA

See online information about  NASA Science Missions. Hubble Space Telescope is part of NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Astrophysics Division. The HST Project Office is at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

Come to the NASA Town Hall Monday, Jan. 8 2024: 12:45-13:45 CT in the Great Hall A

Come by the NASA Town Hall, In January  to hear the latest news about HST and other missions.

Future Conference - Be Sure to Mark Your Calendars!

HST Related Conferences for 2024

Monday 15 April - 19 April 2024

Recipes to Regulate Star Formation at All Scales: From the Nearby Universe to the First Galaxies

Event information 

Location

Porto, Portuga

Description

Star formation is a fundamental process defining galaxies, impacting virtually every facet of astronomy. However, precise mechanisms governing star formation activity, including but not limited to stellar and AGN feedback, and its evolution with redshift remain a subject of intense debate. With recent observations from cutting-edge (ground-based and space telescopes) observatories (e.g., JWST, HST, ALMA, VLT, Keck) unprecedented data have become available to study star formation at all redshifts. While state-of-the-art simulations are aiding us in the construction of increasingly more realistic models of galaxy formation and evolution to predict and interpret these observables, high redshift observations cannot provide the level of cloud-scale physical detail that the nearby galaxies have to offer.

Monday 29 April - 2 May 2024

Science with the Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes VII: Stars, Gas & Dust in the Universe

Event information

Location

Space Telescope Science Institute

3700 San Martin Drive

Baltimore, MD 21220

Description

We are delighted to announce the latest in a series of ESA-sponsored conferences, in collaboration with STScI, which highlight the scientific impact of the Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes. After much anticipation of their complementary capabilities, we are now in the remarkable period of having these two pioneering observatories in science operations at the same time — the much-heralded Golden Age for UV-optical-IR space astronomy has arrived!



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