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  • Hubble's Successor: The James Webb Space Telescope


    Added on Friday 15 January 2010 12:08:39
    by Best0fScience
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    Science@ESA (Episode 4): Following The Redshift (Part 2) - Hubble's Successor: The James Webb Space Telescope.

    In this fourth episode of the Science@ESA vodcast series Rebecca Barnes will identify some of the key discoveries achieved with the famous Hubble Space Telescope, look at the concept of redshift, and meet a new telescope that will be used to uncover the early Universe.

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    Named in 2002 in honour of NASA's administrator during the Apollo programme, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) mission is a collaborative project between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.

    JWST will address many of the outstanding issues of modern astronomy related to the 'Early Universe' and is expected to yield scientific breakthroughs as did its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope. JWST will be a general-purpose observatory with a suite of astronomical infrared-sensitive instruments.

    Compared to existing or planned observatories, JWST will have the unique advantage of combining superb image quality throughout a wide wavelength range, a wide field of view and unparalleled photon sensitivity due to its 6.5-metre diameter telescope primary mirror.

    http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/area/index.cfm?fareaid=29

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    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is a planned infrared space observatory, the partial successor to the aging Hubble Space Telescope. The JWST will not be a complete successor, because it will not be sensitive to all of the light wavelengths that Hubble can see.

    The main scientific goal is to observe the most distant objects in the universe, those beyond the reach of either ground based instruments or the Hubble. The JWST project is a NASA-led international collaboration with contributors in fifteen nations, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

    Originally called the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST), it was renamed in 2002 after NASA's second administrator, James E. Webb (1906-1992). Webb had headed NASA from the beginning of the Kennedy administration through the Johnson administration (1961-68), thus overseeing all the manned launches in the Mercury through Gemini programs, until just before the first manned Apollo flight.

    Current plans call for the telescope to be launched on an Ariane 5 rocket in June 2014, on a five-year mission (10 year goal). The JWST will reside in solar orbit near the Sun-Earth L2 point, which is on a line passing from the Sun to the Earth, but about 1.5 million km farther away from the Sun than is the Earth.

    This position, which moves around the Sun in exact orbital synchrony with the Earth, will allow JWST to shield itself from infrared from both Sun and Earth, by using a single radiation shield positioned between the telescope and the Sun-Earth direction.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Webb_Space_Telescope
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  • GreatAgentD

    6.5 meters? Don't we already have quite a few around 10m here on Earth? Does the atmosphere mess things that big? o_O
    Tuesday 07 February 2012 09:46:59
  • makjep

    Fire the particle cannon!
    Sunday 05 February 2012 22:22:53
  • ammaifostpeaici

    I can only thing of one single reason for the 10 dislikes ... and that's the biatch with funny posture and funny clothing
    Friday 20 January 2012 10:35:19
  • misinglink15

    @derekdean100 I would be excited for there to be alien life discovered but until there is concrete evidence we can't know for sure. However I do believe humanity is slightly more advanced technology wise than the public is led to believe.
    Wednesday 18 January 2012 15:24:34
  • MadeInOregon27

    I wish I could have live feed to see what this thing see's 24/7...... WHY!!! I Just want to see things with my own eyes for once!!!
    Sunday 15 January 2012 01:46:31
  • MadeInOregon27

    I wish I could have live feed to see what this thing see's 24/7...... WHY!!!!!!!! I Just want to see things with my own eyes for once!!!!!!!
    Sunday 15 January 2012 01:46:22
  • aluniras

    So they will launch it not 2014 but 2018, what a bummer... Will Hubble last, till these guys get another spacetelescope flying... s;
    Monday 02 January 2012 19:56:27
  • MrAwesomesauce101

    @derekdean100 Btw we can't confirm there is actually life there because we can't observe those planets directly yet. We can only tell that the planets are there and how big they are and how far away they are from there star. Even this telescope can't it can only view the planets in infared plus These agencies are not completely government run and there's no reason to even hide evidence of aliens. Face it we haven't found them yet.
    Monday 26 December 2011 17:34:09
  • MrAwesomesauce101

    @derekdean100 Who taught you English grammar?
    Monday 26 December 2011 17:30:39
  • londonblock

    Rebecca Barnes don´t step on it with those heels!
    Saturday 17 December 2011 11:08:41
  • hallowedbeeddie

    I have the weirdest hard-on!!!
    Saturday 10 December 2011 16:52:11
  • renegade1179

    @derekdean100 Your tinfoil hat called - it needs more foil
    Tuesday 06 December 2011 17:08:04
  • derekdean100

    YEA WE WILL SEE SO MUCH MORE.BUT WHOS WE????U OR ME WONT SEE FUCK ALL,CAUSE WAT EVER IT FINDS,I PUT MY LIFE ON IT IT WILL B KEPT AS TOP SECRETE AS ALWAYS,IF IT EVEN A FUCKING UFO WE STILL WONT B SHOWN IT NEVER MIND OTHER LIFE INVESTED PLANETS LIKE EARTH,EVERYTHING IS A FUCKING SECRETE WITH AMERICA,EVEN CHINE AND RUSSIA ARE ANNOYED WITH THE YANKS 4 NOT SHARING SUM OF THERE 1OOS OF SECETES 2 DO WITH OUTTA LIFE
    Monday 21 November 2011 20:27:13
  • RosbifFrog

    We saw this in a video at the planetarium at National Space Centre Leicester England. It's going to be amazing. We will see so much more than ever before. The design is amazing. Just hope it doesnt go wrong out there because its going to be so so so far away from Earth than what Hubble is now.
    Thursday 17 November 2011 15:27:26
  • CynicalVision

    It reminds me of a Star Destroyer.
    Wednesday 16 November 2011 16:57:56
  • CynicalVision

    I just read the good news, it's not been cancelled. :)
    Wednesday 16 November 2011 16:57:02
  • aczjbr

    Rio de Janeiro. I´m admirer of the space explorations. I ask for like this the all citizens of the it USA that they help to save James Webb of the cuts of budget of his Congress. Hear the video below. Help to save the humanity's eyes. And spread for his/her compatriots. Save the James Webb Space Telescope / watch?v=aZGE86qBxCI&feature=re­­­­­­­­­­lated Jame-Webb 6.5 b$ Space Telescope.wmv /watch?v=A3XWZ5v­­j1GI&feature­­=related
    Monday 14 November 2011 15:45:04
  • gnabeel

    They don't have 8 Billion $ for this baby but 3000 Billion for war ? If those 3 trillion dollars spent on war in Afghanistan & Iraq were spent on space exploration, We would have already launched it from Mars.
    Thursday 10 November 2011 18:46:23
  • Ichliebegermany

    @IcyScythe its not cancelled
    Wednesday 09 November 2011 04:38:47
  • IcyScythe

    is this still scheduled to go up? If so when? I was looking at wiki it said stuff about it being cancelled.. If we'd just stop going to war so often we could afford this and most.
    Friday 04 November 2011 12:10:47
  • WARFARENINJA

    No kiddin man this guy sound like Tony Montana.
    Monday 24 October 2011 06:28:25
  • demo2382

    @alexpro00red3 What would really suck is if it made the journey safely, unfolded flawlessly, but couldnt take images because some dumbass forgot to take the lense cover off the camera :)
    Sunday 23 October 2011 18:01:27
  • GK007001

    if we stop giving aids to pakistan, we can fund JWST.. I am curious to find out the origin of out universe and many more THINGS in the space.
    Friday 14 October 2011 14:06:25
  • yerk3

    @gurra1351 To obtain knowledge is the most human instinct there is, that's what we do: fish swim, birds fly, cheetahs run, and we gather and share data and develop and utilize tools. This is simply the latest phase in a process that began when we first learned how to break a piece of flint to make a sharp thing that was good for cutting things.
    Sunday 09 October 2011 13:08:56
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