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NASA's Webb Telescope Is Now Fully Ready for Science

Written by  Tuesday, 12 July 2022 10:21
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Baltimore MD (SPX) Jul 12, 2022
The months-long process of preparing NASA's James Webb Space Telescope for science is now complete. All of the seventeen ways or 'modes' to operate Webb's scientific instruments have now been checked out, which means that Webb has completed its commissioning activities and is ready to begin full scientific operations. Each of Webb's four scientific instruments has multiple modes of operati

The months-long process of preparing NASA's James Webb Space Telescope for science is now complete. All of the seventeen ways or 'modes' to operate Webb's scientific instruments have now been checked out, which means that Webb has completed its commissioning activities and is ready to begin full scientific operations.

Each of Webb's four scientific instruments has multiple modes of operation, utilizing customized lenses, filters, prisms, and specialized machinery that needed to be individually tested, calibrated, and ultimately verified in their operational configuration in space before beginning to capture precise scientific observations of the universe.

The last of all seventeen instrument modes to be commissioned was NIRCam's coronagraph capability, which works to mostly block incoming starlight by inserting a mask in front of a target star, suppressing the target star's relatively bright light to increase contrast and enable detection of fainter nearby companions such as exoplanets.

NIRCam, or the Near-Infrared Camera, is equipped with five coronagraphic masks - three round masks and two bar-shaped masks - that suppress starlight under different conditions of contrast and separation between the star and its companions.

In addition to capturing detailed imagery of the universe, NIRCam is the observatory's main wavefront sensor that is used to fine-tune the telescope's optics. It has this double duty by design due to having a comparatively wide field of view and possessing a suite of special internal optics that enable it to take out-of-focus images of stars and even take 'selfie' images of the primary mirror itself.

The team was able to start aligning the telescope's optics even while the observatory was still cooling down, because of NIRCam's ability to safely operate at higher-than-normal, but still cryogenic, operating temperatures.

"From the moment we first took images with NIRCam to start the telescope alignment process to the checkout of coronagraphy at the end of commissioning, NIRCam has performed flawlessly. Observers are going to be very pleased with the data they receive, and I am extremely happy with how 20 years of work by my team are now realized in amazing performance," said Marcia Rieke, principal investigator for the NIRCam instrument and regents professor of astronomy, University of Arizona.


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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
James Webb Space Telescope opens its eyes on the Universe
Washington (AFP) July 11, 2022
Space enthusiasts are holding their breath. The James Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful ever sent into orbit, is set Tuesday to unveil breathtaking new views of the Universe with a clarity that's never been seen before. Distant galaxies, bright nebulae and a faraway giant gas planet are among the observatory's first targets, US space agency NASA said Friday. But the images themselves have been jealously guarded to build suspense ahead of the big reveal. "I'm looking very much forwa ... read more


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