The James Webb Space Telescope, by the numbers

In this still picture from a Nasa TV broadcast, the James Webb Space Telescope separates from Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket after launching from Europe’s Spaceport, the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana, on December 25, 2021. Picture: Various sources / AFP)

In this still picture from a Nasa TV broadcast, the James Webb Space Telescope separates from Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket after launching from Europe’s Spaceport, the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana, on December 25, 2021. Picture: Various sources / AFP)

Published Jul 11, 2022

Share

by Lucie Aubourg

Washington - The most powerful space telescope ever built, James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is set to deliver its first full-colour scientific images to the world on Tuesday.

Here is an overview of this feat of human ingenuity, in five key figures.

More than 6.5 metres

The centerpiece of the observatory is its huge main mirror, measuring more than 6.5 metres in diameter and made up of 18 smaller, hexagonal-shaped mirrors.

The observatory also has four scientific instruments: cameras to take pictures of the cosmos, and spectrographs, which break down light to study which elements and molecules make up objects.

The mirror and the instruments are protected from the light of our sun by a tennis-court sized thermal shield, made up of five superimposed layers.

Each layer is hair thin, and together they ensure the telescope operates in the darkness needed to capture faint glimmers from the far reaches of the universe.

Million miles away

Unlike the Hubble telescope which revolves around the Earth, the JWST orbits around the sun, nearly 1.6 million kilometres from us, or four times the distance from our planet to the moon.

A cluster of young stars resembles an aerial burst, surrounded by clouds of interstellar gas and dust, in a nebula NGC 3603 located in the constellation Carina, in this image captured in August 2009 and December 2009, and obtained on September 26, 2018. Picture: Nasa/ESA/R. O'Connell/F Paresce/E Young/Ames Research Center/WFC3 Science Oversight Committee/Hubble Heritage Team/STScI/AURA/Handout via REUTERS

It took the spacecraft almost a month to reach this region, called Lagrange Point two, where it remains in a fixed position behind the Earth and sun to give it a clear view of the cosmos.

Here, the gravity from the sun and Earth balance the centrifugal motion of a satellite, meaning it needs minimal fuel for course correction.

13.8 billion years

In astronomy, the farther out you see, the deeper back in time you're looking.

The JWSP’s infrared capabilities are what make it uniquely powerful -- allowing it to detect light from the earliest stars, which has been stretched into infrared wavelengths as the universe expanded.

This lets it peer further back in time than any previous telescope, to within a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, 13.8 billion years ago.

Three-decade wait

The project was first conceived in the 1990s, but construction did not begin until 2004.

Then the JWST’s launch date was repeatedly postponed. Initially set for 2007, it finally took place on December 25, 2021, aboard an Ariane 5 rocket, from French Guiana.

In this picture released by Nasa, Arianespace’s Ariane 5 rocket with Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope onboard, is seen at the launch pad on December 23, 2021, at Europe’s Spaceport, the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana. Picture: Bill INGALLS / Nasa / AFP)

$10 billion

The JWST is an international collaboration between US space agency Nasa, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency, involving more than 10 000 people.

The lifetime cost to Nasa alone will be approximately $9.7 billion (about R164bn), according to an analysis by the Planetary Society, or $10.8bn adjusted for inflation to 2020 dollars.

AFP