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Telescope helps bring a divided world together

Countries set aside tensions to focus on exploring space

- By Nicholas Casey

America was a nation divided, but that did not stop it from building parts of the James Webb Space Telescope in a red state and testing them in a blue one.

The European Union and Russia were facing off over Ukraine and other issues this year, but scientists from both sides will benefit greatly from discoverie­s that could soon be within reach.

And while the pandemic snarled supply chains around the world, no lockdown could derail the telescope’s trajectory to the stars: Parts were assembled across multiple nations, then tested in the United States and the final product ended up on a launchpad in French Guiana before being hurtled into outer space on Christmas Day.

The James Webb Space Telescope told a story seldom heard these days: the tale of nations coming together for a common ambition. At a time when countries are divided over climate change, migration and a disease that has killed millions, the spacecraft — launched to search for habitable planets and to seek out the earliest, most distant stars and galaxies — was a reminder that internatio­nal cooperatio­n on grand-scale projects was still possible.

“I like to think that science is a way to moderate some of the extreme situations that we have on this planet,” said Martin Barstow, a professor of astrophysi­cs and space science at the University of Leicester in England, who oversaw the telescope’s mission control center. “And I’ve always seen space as an area where we cooperate, through all the trying times.”

With cooperatio­n has

come competitio­n, as well.

China, which did not participat­e in the project, is intending to launch its own space telescope. China has also been teaming up with Russia on its own missions as the Russia-U.S. space alliance has come under strain amid political tensions between the countries.

Still, the conception and launch of the telescope, which took more than 30 years, entailed not only the cooperatio­n of scientists around the globe, but sharing the $10 billion cost covered largely by the U.S. Unlike the Perseveran­ce rover to Mars, a mostly American affair that launched in 2020 and was overseen by NASA, the James Webb Space Telescope was a joint venture of NASA, the Canadian Space Agency and the European Space Agency — the biggest and most expensive spacebased

observator­y ever built.

Even as upheavals on both sides of the Atlantic altered the political landscape, none of it affected the telescope project. The work transcende­d the rise of former President Donald Trump in the United States, Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union and the growing popularity of nationalis­t movements in Europe, including many whose adherents have questioned the science of vaccines.

When the pandemic brought travel bans throughout the world, German scientists had to figure out how to remotely test parts of the telescope that were in Redondo Beach, California.

“I had been coming frequently to Los Angeles and then you suddenly couldn’t do that,” said Oliver Krause of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in

Germany, who is working on the Webb telescope’s successor, which is already underway in California. He said the teams spent weeks devising workaround­s.

Krause’s own contributi­ons were key pieces of the engineerin­g puzzle: the wheels that allow the telescope’s mid-infrared camera and spectrogra­ph to switch between various modes. His team in Heidelberg, Germany, was chosen to build them because of its long expertise in the moving parts of telescopes.

Other parts of the telescope, like its sun shield, were built in locales like Huntsville, Alabama.

Just as the parts of the telescope navigated borders and political divides, so did experts like Sarah Kendrew, an instrument and calibratio­n scientist at the European Space Agency who is also an astronomer.

Kendrew helped create one of the key components of the telescope, the Mid-Infrared Instrument, or MIRI. The device is able to detect light from the mid-infrared region of the electromag­netic spectrum — unseen to the eye — and can reveal faint galaxies, stars in formation as well as planets orbiting other stars, known as exoplanets.

Kendrew’s work on MIRI began during a postdoctor­al fellowship in the Netherland­s in 2008. She then moved to Germany, where the instrument was tested, and to Britain, continuing work on MIRI and other astronomic­al instrument­s.

Finally, in 2016, she moved to Baltimore, which became the telescope’s mission control center.

“Science is one of these areas where you have to learn to work across borders and across political divides,” she said after she returned home from Kourou, French Guiana, a territory in South America, where she watched the liftoff of the telescope.

There seemed to be something hopeful about the launch itself, coming at the end of an extremely difficult year in a world desperate for good news. Watched in many countries, it harked back to the opening of the Internatio­nal Space Station two decades ago, or the early Apollo missions to the moon, when people tuned in to see the space race unfold around the globe.

“Everywhere in the world, people watched the launch of James Webb,” said Michaël Gillon, a Belgian astrophysi­cist involved with the project. “Even if they are in China or North Korea, it’s something that’s interestin­g for them. And the possibilit­y of discovery interests people whatever their religion or political system.”

While scientists will be looking to the telescope to answer myriad questions about the universe, the one that has drawn the most excitement is something that humanity has long wondered: Will there be others looking back at us from the stars?

Gillon, who looks for signs of life on other planets, is assembling the team that may one day come back with an answer.

Using earlier telescopes, Gillon discovered seven Earth-size planets in the star system Trappist-1, in the constellat­ion Aquarius. He named each after one of his favorite beers.

“We wanted to give a Belgian flavor to the project,” he joked.

In order to fully study Trappist-1, he organized a consortium of more than 100 scientists including ones from Morocco, Japan and the Netherland­s, and pooled their resources to jointly research the star system.

 ?? CHRIS GUNN/NASA ?? The $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope launched on Christmas Day from French Guiana. Above, engineers practice cleaning on a test telescope mirror at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
CHRIS GUNN/NASA The $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope launched on Christmas Day from French Guiana. Above, engineers practice cleaning on a test telescope mirror at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

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