One of the most momentous rocket launches in history looms large.
The colossal James Webb Space Telescope — intended to peer into the deepest realms of the universe — is now perched atop a rocket in French Guiana. As of Dec. 17, NASA expects to launch the prized instrument, commonly dubbed JWST, on Dec. 24.
“We’re going to see the very first stars and galaxies that ever formed,” Jean Creighton, an astronomer and the director of the Manfred Olson Planetarium at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, told Mashable in October.
JWST will orbit the sun a million miles from Earth. Both the public and scientists alike are getting their final views of the dazzling telescope (it’s built with gold-plated mirrors) before a reliable Ariane 5 rocket blasts JWST well beyond our planet. The photos below show the telescope in various stages of testing, folding, and final preparation.
A successful launch, however, would just be the start of JWST’s ambitious odyssey to view the deepest cosmos. The telescope, now tightly packed on a rocket, must unfurl in space. That’s no simple task. After leaving Earth, JWST will “begin the most complex sequence of deployments ever attempted in a single space mission,” explained NASA. For example, 107 pins must release for the telescope’s great sunshield, which is the length of a tennis court, to properly unfold.
If all goes well, JWST will:
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Peer some 13.7 billion years into the past, glimpsing the first planets and galaxies
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See stars and galaxies currently hidden beyond thick clouds of cosmic dust
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View wild exoplanets in far-off solar systems
Credit: NASA / Chris Gunn
Credit: ESA / M. Pedoussaut
Credit: Northrop Grumman
Credit: NASA / MSFC / David Higginbotham
Credit: ESA / M.Pedoussaut
Credit: ESA / M.Pedoussaut
Credit: ESA / CNES / Arianespace
Credit: NASA / Desiree Stover
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