Webb Telescope Has Launched but Trickiest Bit yet to Come
The James Webb Space Telescope launched to great fanfare on Christmas Day, with the powerful piece of technology promising great things during the course of its mission to explore deep space.
Many watching the livestream of Saturday’s launch will have been holding their breath during the countdown, though there was no need to worry. Arianespace’s trusty Ariane 5 rocket did the job, lifting the James Webb Space Telescope to space in a perfect start to the multi-year mission.
But for the Webb team — comprising personnel from NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency — the tension won’t recede until the telescope has fully deployed ahead of starting its work.
The satellite is so large that its myriad of components had to be folded into a compact shape so that it could fit inside the rocket’s fairing for launch.
Over the coming weeks, step by step, each of these components will automatically unfurl in a complex process that has never been attempted before in a space mission. And if any one of these deployments goes wrong, it could well be curtains for the $10 billion project.
The good news is that the initial deployments have gone to plan. They include the solar array, which released and deployed about 30 minutes after launch, and the gimbaled antenna assembly, which successfully deployed on December 26.
“Our team just deployed the gimbaled antenna assembly, which includes Webb’s high-data-rate dish antenna,” NASA said in a tweet. “This antenna will be used to send at least 28.6GB of data down from the observatory, twice a day.”
???? Hello Webb? It's us, Earth!
Our team just deployed the gimbaled antenna assembly, which includes Webb’s high-data-rate dish antenna. This antenna will be used to send at least 28.6 Gbytes of data down from the observatory, twice a day: https://t.co/4vKcbjbKJO pic.twitter.com/zFjhF3yLzY
— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) December 26, 2021
On Tuesday, December 28, one of the most challenging deployment stages will begin. It involves the enormous sunshield, described as the size of a tennis court and requiring a slew of motors to push it into position. It will take five days for the sunshield to fully unfurl, and no, we doubt the Webb team will be getting much sleep during this crucial process.
Assuming the sunshield successfully unfurls, Webb will then be in a position to deploy the secondary mirror and the instrument radiator in early January.
Thirteen days after launch comes another step that’s likely to give team members and Webb fans a few more sleepless nights — the deployment of the 21-foot-wide golden mirror that’s central to its mission.
The procedure involves the locking into place of two wings of mirrors, each one holding three of the entire mirror’s 18 segments. Successful completion of this stage will mark the telescope’s full deployment.
Webb will then spend a couple more weeks traveling to its destination orbit at a point known as L2, about four times the distance between Earth and the moon. Over the following five months the mirror’s alignment will be fine-tuned and the telescope’s instruments calibrated.
And then the fun begins.
For more details on the various deployment stages, check out NASA’s special site for the James Webb Space Telescope mission.
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