The James Webb Space Telescope
A new giant space telescope that should extend our view across the cosmos to the first stars that shone in the early universe, and image planets around distant stars.
The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope is only days away. Scheduled for lift off on 22 December, the largest and most complex space observatory ever built will be sent to an orbit beyond the moon.
James Webb is so huge that it has had to be folded up to fit in the rocket. There will be a tense two weeks over Christmas and the New Year as the space giant unfurls and unfolds. Its design and construction has taken about 30 years under the leadership of NASA鈥檚 Goddard Space Flight Center.
With its huge 6.5 metre-wide primary mirror, the giant observatory promises to extend our view across the cosmos to the first stars to shine in the early universe. That鈥檚 a vista of Cosmic Dawn: the first small clusters of stars to form and ignite out of what had been a universe of just dark clouds of primordial gas. If the James Webb succeeds in capturing the birth of starlight, we will be looking at celestial objects more than 13.5 billion light years away.
Closer to home, the telescope will also revolutionise our understanding of planets orbiting stars beyond the solar system.
91热爆 science correspondent Jonathan Amos reports from the European Space Agency鈥檚 launch site in French Guyana from where James Webb will be sent into space. He talks to astronomers who will be using the telescope and NASA engineers who鈥檝e built the telescope and tested it in the years leading to launch.
Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker
Picture: James Webb Space Telescope, Credit Northrup Grumman
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- Mon 13 Dec 2021 20:32GMT91热爆 World Service Online, Americas and the Caribbean, UK DAB/Freeview & Europe and the Middle East only
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