Science
Related: About this forumThe Webb telescope just took the deepest photo of the universe ever
Elisha Sauers - Yesterday 6:20 AM
In a matter of days, scientists will release an unprecedented photo of the universe, going deeper into the cosmos than ever before and revealing some of the oldest stars and galaxies.
The image is one of 10 to 20 photos that will come from the James Webb Space Telescope, the preeminent observatory in the sky, on July 12, NASA officials confirmed during a news conference on Wednesday. For the few scientists who have seen a sneak peek, the new snapshots have inspired profound existential experiences and left some on the verge of tears, they said.
"It's an emotional moment when you see nature suddenly releasing some of its secrets," said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA's associate administrator for science missions. "It's not an image. It's a new worldview."
The telescope launched from Earth about six months ago, on Christmas morning, and is now orbiting the sun nearly 1 million miles away. NASA deputy administrator Pam Melroy, a former astronaut, said this week the team expects the telescope to work for a long time: It has enough fuel on board to support research over the next 20 years.
More:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/the-webb-telescope-just-took-the-deepest-photo-of-the-universe-ever/ar-AAZ71yN
targetpractice
(4,919 posts)Seems like great photos, but we gotta wait to see them.
lamp_shade
(15,105 posts)Firestorm49
(4,254 posts)BWdem4life
(2,504 posts)Judi Lynn
(162,673 posts)Astronomer Working With Webb Said the new Images Almost Brought him to Tears. Well see Them on July 12th
POSTED ON JULY 3, 2022
The scientific and astronomical community are eagerly waiting for Tuesday, July 12th, to come around. On this day, the first images taken by NASAs James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will be released! According to a previous statement by the agency, these images will include the deepest views of the Universe ever taken and spectra obtained from an exoplanet atmosphere. In another statement issued yesterday, the images were so beautiful that they almost brought Thomas Zarbuchen Associate Administrator for NASAs Science Mission Directorate (SMD) to tears!
The James Webb Space Telescope is the most powerful and complex observatory ever deployed, not to mention the most expensive ($10 billion)! Because of its complex system of mirrors and its advanced sun shield, the telescope had to be designed so that it could be folded up (origami style) to fit inside a payload fairing, then unfold once it reached space. To ensure everything would work, the telescope had to be rigorously tested, a process that caused several delays and cost overruns (a situation made worse by the COVID pandemic).
Since it launched on Christmas Day in 2021, the observatory has successfully unfolded, commissioned its science instruments, and reached the L2 Lagrange Point, where it will remain for its entire mission. It also successfully aligned all 18 of its segmented mirrors, which are arranged in a honeycomb configuration that measures 6.5 meters (more than 21 feet) in diameter almost three times the size of Hubbles primary mirror. Previously, NASA released test images the JWST took of a star 2,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Ursa Major (HD 84406).
. . .
The James Webb images peer even further into the cosmos and reveal what galaxies looked like just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. These earliest galaxies were instrumental in dispelling the Cosmic Dark Ages, a period where the Universe was permeated by neutral hydrogen atoms and therefore invisible to modern instruments. Astronomers know what the Universe looked like just prior to this period, thanks to the relic radiation from the Big Bang, which is visible to our instruments the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB).
More:
https://www.universetoday.com/156539/astronomer-working-with-webb-said-the-new-images-almost-brought-him-to-tears-well-see-them-on-july-12th/
Duppers
(28,260 posts)Looking forward to 7/12.
Response to Judi Lynn (Reply #5)
Duppers This message was self-deleted by its author.