|  | This is a file from the  Wikimedia Commons. Information from its  description page there is shown below.Commons is a freely licensed media file repository.  You can help.
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        Summary 
        
         
          
           | Description | The deepest visible/ultraviolet light image of the  universe ever taken, revealing  galaxies down to 30th  magnitude. Glaring fiercely across 12 billion  light-years of space is the brilliant beacon of a distant  quasar (z=2.2). Most of the galaxies in this view lie between us and the quasar. The image was taken with the camera on the  Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). The STIS recorded how numerous invisible intervening clouds of hydrogen gas affected the quasar's light. Some of the galaxies in the image may be linked to these clouds. | 
          
           | Date | 23 November 1998 | 
          
           | Source | http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/html/opo9841e.html ( TIFF image) | 
          
           | Author | R. Williams (STScI), the HDF-S Team, and NASA/ESA | 
         
         
         Licensing 
        
         
          | Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse | 
        
        
         
          |  | This file is in the  public domain because it was created by  NASA and  ESA. NASA Hubble material (and ESA Hubble material prior to 2009) is copyright-free and may be freely used as in the public domain without fee, on the condition that only NASA, STScI, and/or ESA is credited as the source of the material. This license does not apply if ESA material created after 2008 or source material from other organizations is in use. The material was created for NASA by Space Telescope Science Institute under Contract NAS5-26555, or for ESA by the Hubble European Space Agency Information Centre.  Copyright statement at hubblesite.org or  2008 copyright statement at spacetelescope.org. For material created by the  European Space Agency on the spacetelescope.org site since 2009, use the {{ ESA-Hubble}} tag.
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        External Links 
        
        
        
        
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