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The James Webb Space Telescope

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Title: The James Webb Space Telescope


1
The James Webb Space Telescope
2
Introduction
  • The James Webb Space Telescope
  • The James Webb Space Telescope, also called Webb
    or JWST, is a large, space-based observatory,
    optimized for infrared wavelengths, which will
    complement and extend the discoveries of the
    Hubble Space Telescope. It will have longer
    wavelength coverage and greatly improved
    sensitivity. The longer wavelengths enable Webb
    to look further back in time to find the first
    galaxies that formed in the early Universe, and
    to peer inside dust clouds where stars and
    planetary systems are forming today. It is
    scheduled for launch in 2013.

3
James E .Webb
  • This space-based observatory is named after James
    E. Webb (1906- 1992), NASA's second
    administrator. Webb is best known for leading
    Apollo, a series of lunar exploration programs
    that landed the first humans on the Moon.
    However, he also initiated a vigorous space
    science program that was responsible for more
    than 75 launches during his tenure, including
    America's first interplanetary explorers.

4
How will Webb be better?
  • Webb is designed to look deeper into space to see
    the earliest stars and galaxies that formed in
    the Universe and to look deep into nearby dust
    clouds to study the formation of stars and
    planets. In order to do this, Webb will have a
    much larger primary mirror than Hubble (2.5 times
    larger in diameter, or about 6 times larger in
    area), giving it more light-gathering power. It
    also will have infrared instruments with longer
    wavelength coverage and greatly improved
    sensitivity than Hubble. Finally, Webb will
    operate much farther from Earth, maintaining its
    extremely cold operating temperature, stable
    pointing and higher observing efficiency than
    with the Earth-orbiting Hubble.

5
How long will the mission last?
  • Webb will have a mission lifetime of not less
    than 5-1/2 years after launch, with the goal of
    having a lifetime greater than 10 years. The
    lifetime is limited by the amount of fuel used
    for maintaining the orbit, and by the testing and
    redundancy that ensures that everything on the
    spacecraft will work. Webb will carry fuel for a
    10-year lifetime the project will do mission
    assurance testing to guarantee 5 years of
    scientific operations starting at the end of the
    commissioning period 6 months after launch.

6
Servicing Webb
  • Hubble is in low-Earth orbit, located
    approximately 600 kilometers away from the Earth,
    and is therefore readily accessible for servicing
    using the Space Shuttle. Webb will be operated at
    the second Sun-Earth Lagrange point, located
    approximately 1.5 million kilometers away from
    the Earth, and will therefore be beyond the reach
    of any manned vehicle currently being planned for
    the next decade. In the early days of the Webb
    project, studies were conducted to evaluate the
    benefits, practicality and cost of servicing Webb
    either by human space flight, by robotic
    missions, or by some combination such as
    retrieval to low-Earth orbit. Those studies
    concluded that the potential benefits of
    servicing do not offset the increases in mission
    complexity, mass and cost that would be required
    to make Webb serviceable, or to conduct the
    servicing mission itself.

7
Size of the Webb
  • The diameter of the primary mirror, will be about
    6.5 meters (21 feet) for Webb. This is about 2.7
    times larger than the diameter of Hubble, or
    about 6 times larger in area. The Webb will have
    a mass of approximately 6,500 kg, with a weight
    of 14,300 lbs on Earth (in orbit, everything is
    weightless), a little more than half the mass of
    Hubble. The largest structure of Webb will be its
    sunshade, which must be able to shield the
    deployed primary mirror and the tower that holds
    the secondary mirror. The sunshade is
    approximately the size of a tennis court.

8
Communication
  • The Webb will send science and engineering data
    to Earth using a high frequency radio
    transmitter. Large radio antennas that are part
    of the NASA Deep Space Network will receive the
    signals and forward them to the Webb Science and
    Operation Center at the Space Telescope Science
    Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

9
Orbit
  • Webb is going to the second Lagrange (L2) point,
    which is 1 million miles (1.5 million km) away
    from Earth, and it just takes a while to travel
    such a distance. During the trip to L2, Webb will
    be fully deployed, will cool down to its
    operating temperature, and its systems will begin
    to be checked out and adjusted. These
    commissioning procedures will continue until 6
    months after launch, at which point routine
    scientific operations will begin.
  • Webb will observe primarily the infrared light
    from faint and very distant objects. To avoid
    swamping the very faint astronomical signals with
    radiation from the telescope, the telescope and
    its instruments must be very cold.
  • Webb's operating temperature is less than 50
    degrees above absolute zero 50 Kelvin, (-225
    Celcius, or -370 deg F). Therefore, Webb has a
    large shield that blocks the light from the Sun,
    Earth, and Moon, which otherwise would heat up
    the telescope, and interfere with the
    observations. To have this work, Webb will be in
    an orbit where all three of these objects are in
    about the same direction the second Lagrange
    point (L2) of the Sun-Earth system has this
    property.

10
How far will Webb look?
  • One of the main goals of Webb is to detect some
    of the very first star formation in the Universe.
    This is thought to happen somewhere between
    redshift 15 and 30. At those redshifts, the
    Universe was only one or two percent of its
    current age. The Universe is now 13.7 billion
    years old, and these redshifts correspond to 100
    to 250 million years after the Big Bang. The
    light from the first galaxies has traveled for
    about 13.5 billion years, over a distance of 13.5
    billion light-years.

11
Resources
  • http//www.jwst.nasa.gov/
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