| How to get help | If you have questions about the STIS instrument or issues relating to your STIS data, a member of the Spectrographs Branch will be glad to help you: please email help@stsci.edu. Note, however, that the helpdesk software cannot handle attachments and may not be able to ingest messages larger than 64 Kb. If you have tables and/or images relevant to your question, please make a note of that in your message and wait to send them until you are contacted by a staff member. If this site's content is incorrect or missing, or you are experiencing technical problems, please contact the STIS web curator via help@stsci.edu. |
Trouble navigating our site? |
STScI's web site has six major sections.
All information on STScI's web is accessible through at least one of these sections.
- The Institute
- Find
out about the Institute's staff members: who we are, where we are, what we do,
what's going on, what employment opportunities there are, and how to get in
touch with us.
- HST
- The Hubble Space Telescope is
STScI's first major mission. Here you'll find instrumentation descriptions, instructions
for writing and submitting observing proposals, how to retrieve and analyze HST data,
and images from the telescope.
- JWST
- The James Webb Space Telescope
is STScI's next major mission.
- Community Missions
- The Community
Missions Office supports a diverse portfolio of smaller missions initiated by the
science community using their varied experience, products, and services.
- Data Archives
-
The Multi-Mission Archive at Space Telescope--MAST--hosts data from the HST,
the Digitized Sky Survey, the Guide Star Catalog, and many NASA missions.
- News and Outreach
-
A site devoted to informing the public about Astronomy and HST, and providing educational
resources for teachers.
- Resources
-
The Institute offers a wide range of information services and software tools to astronomers
and the public. Many of these resulted from our work on the HST mission, others are initiatives
of our scientific and technical staff, and still more will come from our work on JWST and
future missions.
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