Skip to main content

James Webb Space Telescope team delivers best possible news

Work to align the James Webb Space Telescope’s enormous mirror has gone so well that the mission team believes its optical performance will be able to “meet or exceed the science goals the observatory was built to achieve.”

NASA’s Webb Reaches Alignment Milestone, Optics Working Successfully

This is the best possible news for the most powerful space telescope ever built as it prepares to peer into deep space in a quest to discover more about the origins of the universe while also searching for distant planets that may support life.

Recommended Videos

The James Webb Space Telescope launched toward the end of December 2021 in a mission expected to last at least 10 years.

This week the Webb team reported the successful completion of a mirror alignment process known as “fine phasing,” which checks that the telescope’s optics are performing at, or above, expectations.

No critical issues were discovered, nor was any measurable contamination or blockages to Webb’s optical path, the team said, adding that its tests showed the observatory is able to successfully gather light from distant objects and deliver it to its instruments.

The excellent news pave the way for the telescope’s exploration of the universe, which is expected to get underway in about three months’ time from its orbit around one million miles from Earth.

NASA this week posted a Webb telescope selfie (below), with all 18 segments on the 21-foot-wide mirror shining brightly as they collect light from a single star during alignment procedures.

Looking sharp, Webb!

A special lens inside the NIRCam instrument took a "selfie" of Webb's mirror segments, verifying their alignment with NIRCam. The segments are bright as they are all collecting light from the same star in unison. https://t.co/RPL4OItJNA #UnfoldTheUniverse pic.twitter.com/jSrupf7i4a

— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) March 16, 2022

“More than 20 years ago, the Webb team set out to build the most powerful telescope that anyone has ever put in space and came up with an audacious optical design to meet demanding science goals,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “Today we can say that design is going to deliver.”

The ambitious $10 billion project is a joint effort involving NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency, with the new telescope set to complement the work of the hugely successful Hubble telescope that’s been exploring deep space for decades, sending back stunning images along the way.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Gorgeous James Webb Space Telescope images land on new U.S. stamps
A new USPS stamp featuring an image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope.

In a mark of its huge impact on the world of science and astronomy, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope finds itself once again as the inspiration for a new set of stamps from the United States Postal Service (USPS).

Two new stamps issued this month feature iconic images captured by Webb, one of them showing a spiral galaxy called NGC 628. “Webb’s observations combine near- and mid-infrared light to reveal glowing gas and dust in stark shades of orange and red, as well as finer spiral shapes with the appearance of jagged edges,” NASA said of the image (below), adding that the galaxy is located 32 million light-years away in the Pisces constellation.

Read more
Group wants to launch a telescope to study black holes from space
Artist concept of the proposed BHEX network.

Black holes are some of the most extreme objects in the universe, and a new mission proposal suggests launching a space telescope specifically to study them. The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) group, which took both the first-ever image of a black hole in 2019 and the first-ever image of the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy in 2022, has plans for a new mission called the Black Hole Explorer (BHEX).

The idea of BHEX is to use a space-based telescope to collect even more detailed information from black holes, as there is less interference from water vapor when viewing them from above the Earth's atmosphere. The aim would be to combine data from this telescope with the many telescopes on the ground that are already used in the EHT project. The next phase of the project is a collaboration between the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) and the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO).

Read more
James Webb spots ancient Spiderweb cluster that’s 10 billion years old
This image shows the Spiderweb protocluster as seen by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-InfraRed Camera).

A new image from the James Webb Space Telescope shows thousands of glittering galaxies that it spied by peering through clouds of dust and using its infrared instruments to reveal what lies beneath. In the center of the image is the Spiderweb protocluster, which is a group of galaxies in the early stages of forming a "cosmic city."

The light from the Spiderweb has been traveling for an astonishing 10 billion years to reach us, so looking at it is like looking back in time to the early stages of the universe. Astronomers are interested in studying this cluster of over 100 galaxies interacting together because it shows how galaxies clumped together to form groups when the universe was still young.

Read more