From: NASA
January
10, 2022 -- NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope team fully deployed its 21-foot,
gold-coated primary mirror, successfully completing the final stage of all
major spacecraft deployments to prepare for science operations.
A joint effort with the European Space
Agency (ESA) and Canadian Space Agency, the Webb mission will explore every
phase of cosmic history – from within our solar system to the most distant
observable galaxies in the early universe.
“Today, NASA achieved another
engineering milestone decades in the making. While the journey is not complete,
I join the Webb team in breathing a little easier and imagining the future
breakthroughs bound to inspire the world,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.
“The James Webb Space Telescope is an unprecedented mission that is on the
precipice of seeing the light from the first galaxies and discovering the
mysteries of our universe. Each feat already achieved and future accomplishment
is a testament to the thousands of innovators who poured their life’s passion
into this mission.”
The two wings of Webb’s primary mirror
had been folded to fit inside the nose cone of an Arianespace Ariane 5 rocket
prior to launch. After more than a week of other critical
spacecraft deployments, the Webb team began remotely unfolding the
hexagonal segments of the primary mirror, the largest ever launched into space.
This was a multi-day process, with the first side deployed
Jan. 7 and the second Jan. 8.
Mission Operations Center ground control
at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore began deploying the
second side panel of the mirror at 8:53 a.m. EST. Once it extended and latched
into position at 1:17 p.m. EST, the team declared all major deployments
successfully completed.
The world’s largest and most complex
space science telescope will now begin moving its 18 primary mirror segments to
align the telescope optics. The ground team will command 126 actuators on the
backsides of the segments to flex each mirror – an alignment that will take
months to complete. Then the team will calibrate the science instruments prior
to delivering Webb’s first images this summer.
“I am so proud of the team – spanning
continents and decades – that delivered this first-of-its kind achievement,”
said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission
Directorate in NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Webb’s successful deployment
exemplifies the best of what NASA has to offer: the willingness to attempt bold
and challenging things in the name of discoveries still unknown.”
Soon, Webb will also undergo a third
mid-course correction burn – one of three planned to place the telescope
precisely in orbit around the second Lagrange point, commonly known as L2,
nearly 1 million miles from Earth. This is Webb’s final orbital position, where
its sunshield will protect it from light from the Sun, Earth, and Moon that
could interfere with observations of infrared light. Webb is designed to peer
back over 13.5 billion years to capture infrared light from celestial objects,
with much higher resolution than ever before, and to study our own solar system
as well as distant worlds.
“The successful completion of all of the
Webb Space Telescope’s deployments is historic,” said Gregory L. Robinson, Webb
program director at NASA Headquarters. “This is the first time a NASA-led
mission has ever attempted to complete a complex sequence to unfold an
observatory in space – a remarkable feat for our team, NASA, and the world.”
NASA’s Science Mission Directorate
oversees the mission. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, manages the project for the agency and oversees the Space Telescope
Science Institute, Northrop Grumman, and other mission partners. In addition to
Goddard, several NASA centers contributed to the project, including Johnson
Space Center in Houston, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, Ames Research Center in Silicon
Valley, and others.
For more information about the Webb
mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/webb
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-s-webb-telescope-reaches-major-milestone-as-mirror-unfolds
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