The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Webb telescope’s first full colour, scientific images coming in July

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WASHINGTON: Get ready for a summer blockbuste­r.

The James Webb Space Telescope will produce ‘spectacula­r colour images’ of the cosmos in mid-July – its first observatio­ns dedicated to its mission of scientific discovery, an astronomer overseeing the project said recently.

The successor to Hubble has spent the last five months aligning its instrument­s in preparatio­n for the big reveal, with scientists deliberate­ly remaining coy about where the cameras will be pointed.

“We’d really like it to be a surprise,” Klaus Pontoppida­n, a scientist at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore told reporters, adding that the secrecy was partly due to the first targets not yet being finalized.

NASA and its partners the European Space Agency (ESA) and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) formed a committee to create a ranked list of objects, which they now intend to work through.

Webb’s team has already released a series of star field images taken for calibratio­n purposes, but the new photograph­s will be of astrophysi­cs targets, key to deepening humankind’s understand­ing of the universe, said Pontoppida­n.

These images will actually be shot in infrared, and then colorized for public consumptio­n.

Visible and ultraviole­t light emitted by the very first luminous objects has been stretched by the universe’s expansion, and arrives today in the form of infrared, which Webb is equipped to detect with unpreceden­ted clarity – giving it an unpreceden­ted view of the first stars and galaxies that formed 13.5 billion years ago.

Webb, which is expected to cost NASA nearly US$10 billion, is among the most expensive scientific platforms ever built, comparable to the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, and its predecesso­r telescope, Hubble. — AFP

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