The Guardian Australia

Nasa begins months-long effort to focus James Webb space telescope

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Nasa has embarked on the monthslong, painstakin­g process of bringing its newly launched James Webb space telescope into focus, a task due for completion in time for the revolution­ary eye in the sky to begin peering into the cosmos by early summer.

Mission control engineers at Nasa’s Goddard space flight centre in Greenbelt, Maryland, began by sending their initial commands to tiny motors called actuators that slowly position and finetune the telescope’s principal mirror.

Consisting of 18 hexagonal segments of gold-plated beryllium metal, the primary mirror measures 6.5 metres (21ft 4in) in diameter – a much larger light-collecting surface than Webb’s predecesso­r, the 30-year-old Hubble telescope.

The 18 segments, which had been folded together to fit inside the cargo bay of the rocket that carried the telescope to space, were unfurled with the rest of its structural components during a two-week period following Webb’s launch on Christmas Day.

Those segments must now be detached from fasteners that held them in place for the launch and then moved forward by about a centimetre from their original configurat­ion – a 10-day process – before they can be aligned to form a single, unbroken, light-collecting surface.

The alignment will take an additional three months, Lee Feinberg, the Webb optical telescope element manager at Goddard, said.

Aligning the primary mirror segments to form one large mirror means each segment “is aligned to one-fivethousa­ndth the thickness of a human hair”, Feinberg said.

“All of this required us to invent things that had never been done before,” such as the actuators, which were built to move incrementa­lly at -240C (-400F) in the vacuum of space, he added.

The telescope’s smaller, secondary mirror, designed to direct light collected from the primary lens into Webb’s camera and other instrument­s, must also be aligned to operate as part of a cohesive optical system.

If all goes as planned, the telescope should be ready to capture its first science images in May, which would be processed over about another month before they can be released to the public, Feinberg said.

The $9bn telescope, described by Nasa as the premier space-science observator­y of the next decade, will mainly view the cosmos in the infrared spectrum, allowing it to gaze through clouds of gas and dust where stars are being born. Hubble has operated primarily at optical and ultraviole­t wavelength­s.

Webb is about 100 times more powerful than Hubble, enabling it to observe objects at greater distances, thus farther back in time, than Hubble or any other telescope. Astronomer­s say this will bring into view a glimpse of the cosmos never previously seen – dating to just 100m years after the Big Bang, the theoretica­l flashpoint that set in motion the expansion of the observable universe an estimated 13.8bn years ago.

The telescope is an internatio­nal collaborat­ion led by Nasa in partnershi­p with the European and Canadian space agencies.

 ?? Photograph: Chris Gunn/Nasa/AFP/Getty Images ?? The James Webb space telescope in Houston before being launched into space.
Photograph: Chris Gunn/Nasa/AFP/Getty Images The James Webb space telescope in Houston before being launched into space.

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