ESA releases first set of Euclid images and data
Date:
Sat, 05 Apr 2025 21:28:49 +0000
Description:
The European Space Agency (ESA) released the first batch of images and data  for its The post ESA releases first set of Euclid images and data appeared  first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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The European Space Agency (ESA) released the first batch of images and data  for its Euclid space telescope. The images focus on Euclids three deep field  areas, patches of sky the telescope will observe dozens of times to peer deep  into the cosmos. Though the new release only contains Euclids first look into  these areas, it has already provided astronomers with a treasure trove of 
data on galaxies and other cosmic phenomena. 
Euclid was launched atop a Falcon 9 in early July 2023 on a mission to map  nearly a third of the sky in incredible detail. With Euclids observations,  astronomers want to explore the history of the universe and reveal the nature  of dark energy and dark matter. Since the launch, ESA has published a few  glimpses into the telescopes capabilities, including spectacular views of  nebulae, galaxies, galaxy clusters, and an image representing the first 1% of  Euclids survey. 
The latest release, Quick Data Release 1 (Q1), covers the largest area of the  sky so far  63 square degrees, or over 300 times the size of a full Moon  and  results from only one week of observations. Astronomers collaborated with  citizen scientists to train artificial intelligence (AI) to catalog hundreds  of gravitational lenses and the shapes of hundreds of thousands of galaxies. 
 
 
Its impressive how one observation of the deep field areas has already given  us a wealth of data that can be used for a variety of purposes in astronomy:  from galaxy shapes to strong lenses, clusters, and star formation, among  others, said Euclid project scientist Valeria Pettorino of ESA. We will  observe each deep field between 30 and 52 times over Euclids six-year 
mission, each time improving the resolution of how we see those areas and the  number of objects we manage to observe. Just think of the discoveries that  await us. 
Euclids three deep fields are known as North, South, and Fornax, named after  their locations in the sky. The deep field North covers an area of 22.9 
square degrees in the constellation of Draco. The most striking feature in  this field is the Cats Eye Nebula, a cloud of dust 3,000 light-years from  Earth, made of the leftovers from a dying star that shed its outer layers. 
The North field also contains the first Einstein ring Euclid discovered 
around a galaxy 590 million light-years away , as well as faint clouds of  interstellar gas and dust in our own galaxy. 
 Explore the Euclid Deep Field North in ESASky. Euclids view of the Cats Eye  Nebula (Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image processing by J.-C.  Cuillandre, E. Bertin, G. Anselmi) 
The Fornax deep field is located in the southern constellation of the same  name and covers an area of 12.1 square degrees. This area has been well  studied by other observatories including the Hubble Space Telescope. Euclids  Fornax deep field also includes the much smaller area studied by NASAs 
Chandra X-ray telescope for its Deep Field South. 
 Explore the Euclid Deep Field Fornax in ESASky. 
At 28.1 square degrees, Euclids Deep Field South is the largest of the three.  No other deep survey has studied this area in the constellation of 
Horologium. Euclids view on this field reveals a part of the structure of the  universe also known as the cosmic web, made from galaxy clusters connected by  filaments of gas and dark matter. 
 Explore the Euclid Deep Field South in ESASky. 
So far, Euclid has observed 26 million galaxies in the three deep fields, 
some of them as far as 10.5 billion light-years away. The Q1 release includes  a catalog of 380,000 of these galaxies, categorized by their shapes and  features. Collage of galaxies in different shapes selected from Euclids Q1  release by Zoobot. (Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image  processing by M. Walmsley, M. Huertas-Company, J.-C. Cuillandre) 
This collage is showing just a handful of galaxies from those images. Each  ones made up of billions of stars probably with billions of planets and each  one is unique. Like a fingerprint, theyre shaped by how they grew, explained  Euclid Consortium scientist Mike Walmsley of the University of Toronto,  Canada. Because light takes time to reach us, were looking back in time at 
how they used to look and that tells us about our own possible history. 
To quickly categorize the millions of galaxies in Euclids observations,  astronomers enlisted the help of volunteers to train the Zoobot AI algorithm.  In August 2024, 9,976 citizen scientists from the Galaxy Zoo project  classified galaxies in Euclids images. After training on this data, Zoobot  selected and classified the 380,000 galaxies in the newly released catalog. 
It takes millions of examples to train a good AI model from scratch, but we  already have millions from other telescopes. And so, for Euclid, we only  needed about a month of volunteer effort. Were grateful to around 9,000 
people who joined in to create enough new examples to fine-tune our models to  work well for Euclid, said Walmsley. Collage of strong gravitational lenses 
in Euclids Q1 release. (Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image  processing by M. Walmsley, M. Huertas-Company, J.-C. Cuillandre) 
Another catalog included in the Q1 release lists nearly 500 strong  gravitational lenses. Gravitational lensing is the result of gravity  distorting the light from objects in space. As the light from a distant 
galaxy passes by a closer object, like a galaxy or black hole, it bends the  gravitational pull from the normal and dark matter in the foreground. From 
our perspective, this effect creates a warped image of the distant object. 
To find these strong lenses, astronomers also used AI and citizen scientists,  but using a different process than for the galaxy catalog. First, the Zoobot  algorithm scoured Euclids observations for potential strong lenses, which 
were then inspected by over 1,000 citizen scientists from the Space Warps  project. Finally, experts and additional modeling narrowed down the selection  to 497 strong lenses. 
Until now the vast majority of lenses have been found by ground-based  telescopes and thats because lenses are so rare that you need big chunks of  sky to find them, said Walmsley. We simply havent had a space telescope that  has the area, and the resolution, and the sensitivity to do that. Euclid is  the first telescope which can find large numbers of lenses from space. By the  time Euclid finishes, it will have found at least an order of magnitude more  strong lenses than all previous searches put together. Location of Euclids  Deep Fields. (Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA; ESA/Gaia/DPAC;  ESA/Planck Collaboration) 
The majority of strong lenses in Euclids catalog were not observed before.  According to Walmsley, Euclids observations more than doubled the number of  likely lenses that have been imaged from space. That matters because we can  see really important details in these lenses that are blurred out from the  ground, said Walmsley. See Also Euclid Updates Space Science coverage NSF  Store Click here to Join L2 
Euclids Q1 release only includes 0.4% of the number of galaxies the telescope  is expected to observe throughout its mission. The complete catalog will be 
so big that astronomers can study the weak variant of gravitational lensing  and potentially uncover the nature of dark matter and dark energy. The first  full release of data to answer these cosmology questions is planned for next  year. 
Even though the Q1 release is small compared to the full release, Euclids  scientists have already written 34 scientific papers based on the data, which  will be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics . A preprint of  these papers was made available alongside the Q1 release. With the data now  available to the scientific community and the public, Euclid promises to  answer many questions about the universe. 
Euclid shows itself once again to be the ultimate discovery machine. It is  surveying galaxies on the grandest scale, enabling us to explore our cosmic  history and the invisible forces shaping our Universe, said ESAs Director of  Science, Prof. Carole Mundell. 
 (Lead image: Euclids Deep Field South, 70x zoom . Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid  Consortium/NASA, image processing by J.-C. Cuillandre, E. Bertin, G. Anselmi 
) 
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https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/04/esa-releases-first-set-of-euclid-image s-and-data/
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