Steps in producing color
Hubble Space Telescope images

While many pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope are familiar, less common is an understanding that the telescope does not work exactly like a snapshot camera or a video camera. (There are similarities, however, particularly with a digital still camera.)

Do these pictures look like what we could see with our eyes? The (somewhat glib) answer is, yes and no. The pictures are usually quite different from what we would see, mostly because the telescope and its cameras work quite differently from our eyes.

We cannot see very faint light, though we can distinguish a very wide range of brightnesses in the same scene. We cannot see very dim light in color. HST, by comparison, can detect very faint light, and some light (infrared and ultraviolet) that our eyes cannot see at all.

We reconstruct color photos from black and white digital images returned from the telescope.


"Raw" data. Two exposures with the telescope pointed at precisely the same spot in the sky. All HST exposures include "cosmic rays" (the result of energetic particles in space causing an exposure recorded by the cameras). CRs are distributed randomly but the target image does not change.
This object here is a planetary nebula called NGC 6369.

The individual exposures are combined to remove the cosmic rays by comparing what changed and what did not between the exposures.
(If something did move in the target between exposures, that would be removed too; in that case we would need to be a bit more sophisticated.)

 
The original data contain a very broad range of values ("dynamic range") that is not straightforward to display on a monitor or in print without losing information.
Values selected (the image was "stretched" or optimized) to preserve details in the brighter areas (highlights).
Values selected to preserve details in the fainter areas (shadows).
 


Hubble's cameras produce grayscale (black & white) images. The cameras include color filters, each of which transmits a selected range of color (blocking the other colors). Separate exposures are made through different color filters.
These images are each combined from multiple exposures, as above.
(These particular images were made using "narrow-band" filters, which transmit a very small range of wavelengths, essentially a single color, matched to the color of emission from particular elements: hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, in this case.)



Color (hue) is applied separately to each gray image, as appropriate (red for longer wavelength, blue for shorter).

The assigned colors do not necessarily match the colors transmitted by the filters. Using the additive primaries (red, green and blue) results in the broadest range of displayed colors.

All of the exposures and filters are combined to produce the color composite.

If the colors assigned to the exposures match the colors of the filters (and the exposed colors largely cover the spectrum) then the resulting picture will approximate "natural" (or "true") color. However, different filters and color assignments will result in "unnatural" colors, sometimes called false color or representative color. However, the colors represent physical conditions in the object being photographed: different energy levels or gas densities, for example.
 
The composite image is "cosmetically" cleaned.
Minor image/detector defects (artifacts) are removed.
The combined color composite, enlarged to show details.
The combined color composite, cosmetically cleaned.
 

Below are three versions of the image that have been combined to produce the above color composite. These were processed differently to preserve image detail and improve the contrast separately in the brightest and the faintest parts of the image. These separately processed datasets were combined. This is very similar to how a photographer would "dodge" and "burn" in producing a print from a negative to preserve details in highlights and shadows. (Similar to the examples above, but these are the color composites rather than just a single fileter exposure.)

Red, green, and blue colorized images combined with values selected (the image was "stretched" or optimized) to preserve details in the brighter areas (highlights).
Red, green, and blue colorized images combined with values selected (the image was "stretched" or optimized) to preserve details in the fainter areas (shadows).
Red, green, and blue colorized images combined from shorter exposures using a different set of (broad-band) filters to show the stars rather than the nebula.
 
The Hubble cameras see a very small part of the sky, smaller than many of the objects we want to look at. To produce a larger image we can stitch together a mosaic of separate images.
An image from a ground-based telescope showing the outlines of three Hubble images on the colliding galaxies NGC 2207 and IC 2163, too large to show in one HST exposure.


The individual images that can be stiched together to produce a mosaic.
The panorama composed of three adjacent fields.

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Zolt Levay, STScI
May 29, 2002