NASA administrator Bill Nelson said Wednesday the agency will reveal the
"deepest image of our universe that has ever been taken" on July 12, thanks
to the newly operational James Webb Space Telescope.
"If you think about that, this is farther than humanity has ever looked
before," Nelson said during a press briefing at the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, the operations center for the $10 billion
observatory that was launched in December last year and is now orbiting the
Sun a million miles (1.5 million kilometers) away from Earth.
A wonder of engineering, Webb is able to gaze further into the cosmos than
any telescope before it, thanks to its enormous primary mirror and its
instruments that focus on infrared, allowing it to peer through dust and
gas.
"It's going to explore objects in the solar system and atmospheres of
exoplanets orbiting other stars, giving us clues as to whether potentially
their atmospheres are similar to our own," added Nelson, speaking via phone
while isolating with COVID.
"It may answer some questions that we have: Where do we come from? What more
is out there? Who are we? And of course, it's going to answer some questions
that we don't even know what the questions are."
Webb's infrared capabilities allow it to see deeper back in time to the Big
Bang, which happened 13.8 billion years ago.
Because the universe is expanding, light from the earliest stars shifts from
the ultraviolet and visible wavelengths it was emitted in, to longer
infrared wavelengths—which Webb is equipped to detect at an unprecedented
resolution.
At present, the earliest cosmological observations date to within 330
million years of the Big Bang, but with Webb's capacities, astronomers
believe they will easily break the record.
20 year life
In more good news, NASA deputy administrator Pam Melroy revealed that,
thanks to an efficient launch by NASA's partner Arianespace, the telescope
could stay operational for 20 years, double the lifespan that was originally
envisaged.
"Not only will those 20 years allow us to go deeper into history, and time,
but we will go deeper into science because we have the opportunity to learn
and grow and make new observations," she said.
NASA also intends to share Webb's first spectroscopy of a faraway planet,
known as an exoplanet, on July 12, said NASA's top scientist Thomas
Zurbuchen.
Spectroscopy is a tool to analyze the chemical and molecular composition of
distant objects and a planetary spectrum can help characterize its
atmosphere and other properties such as whether it has water and what its
ground is like.
"Right from the beginning, we'll look at these worlds out there that keep us
awake at night as we look into the starry sky and wonder as we're looking
out there, is there life elsewhere?" said Zurbuchen.
Nestor Espinoza, as STSI astronomer, told AFP that previous exoplanet
spectroscopies carried out using existing instruments were very limited
compared to what Webb could do.
"It's like being in a room that is very dark and you only have a little
pinhole you can look through," he said, of current technology. Now, with
Webb, "You've opened a huge window, you can see all the little details."
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Space & Astrophysics
Billions of years from whose math?? The universe was created by God. The Bible does not say we are the only ones in existence. “A blink of an eye from God is but a thousand years”… We still are learning the “concept of time”…
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