The James Webb Space Telescope

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SUMMARY

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is scheduled to launch no earlier than December 24, 2021, following a two-day delay. The launch window extends until January 6, 2022, due to gravitational constraints related to the moon. The observatory will take approximately six months to reach its operational orbit at the second Lagrange point (L2). The first year of observations will allocate around 10,000 hours of observing time, with significant projects like the Cosmos Web and studies of the TRAPPIST-1 system receiving focused attention.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of orbital mechanics, particularly L2 trajectories
  • Familiarity with astronomical observation techniques
  • Knowledge of NASA's mission planning and proposal review processes
  • Awareness of the technological capabilities of space telescopes
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the JWST's scientific goals and its first-year observation schedule
  • Learn about the significance of the L2 point in space missions
  • Explore the Cosmos Web project and its implications for understanding the early universe
  • Investigate the instrumentation and technology used in the JWST
USEFUL FOR

Astronomers, astrophysicists, space enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the advancements of space observation technology and the scientific discoveries expected from the JWST.

  • #481
pinball1970 said:
It is on the NASA front page image today.

View attachment 337514
Very Spacy!
 
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Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #482
BillTre said:
Very Spacy!
It doesn't look real does it? More like CGI it is so bright.
Webb is so sensitive it can pick up light from ten billion light years distant

Are all those blobs moons? I will look into it.
 
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  • #483
25:12:21 Webb Launch date, so kind of a first day if not a b/day. Happy launch day Webb!
 
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  • #484
Oldest Black hole discovered by Webb in the GN-z11 galaxy.

https://phys.org/news/2024-01-astronomers-oldest-black-hole.html

This is the galaxy, you may remember the image as this was a candidate for oldest galaxy discovered by Hubble (also data from CANDLES and GOODS) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GN-z11

1705585701417.png


HDI is a candidate for the farthest galaxy (Z=13.27). Webb could break its own record if it confirms the distance/red shift and discovers one here too.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD1
 
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  • #485
That image reminds me of a dog trying to snatch a cookie that was tossed to it!
 
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  • #486
Tom.G said:
That image reminds me of a dog trying to snatch a cookie that was tossed to it!
1000012166.jpg
 
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  • #487
DennisN said:
How could anyone refuse that dog a treat?
Some opaqueness in the left eye though?

Next post totally JWST!
 
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  • #489
pinball1970 said:
Some early universes galaxies were elongated according to Webb data.

IFYPFY. . . . :wink:

.
 
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  • #490
OCR said:
IFYPFY. . . . :wink:

.
Done!
 
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  • #491
OCR said:
IFYPFY. . . . :wink:

.
TIL that it's pronounced just like it's spelled... "iffy-piffy". :smile:
 
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  • #493
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  • #494
mfb said:
There are rumors that 55 Cancri might be one of the first, or even the first, target. It has five known exoplanets, the innermost orbits the star in less than a day.

More recent about 55 Cancri:

Renyu Hu, et. al. "A secondary atmosphere on the rocky Exoplanet 55 Cancrie", 8 May 2024 (Nature)

Note from Nature said:
We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.

Abstract:

Characterizing rocky exoplanets is a central endeavor of astronomy, and yet the search for atmospheres on rocky exoplanets has hitherto resulted in either tight upper limits on the atmospheric mass 1–3 or inconclusive results 4–6. The 1.95-REarth and 8.8-MEarth planet 55 Cnc e, with a predominantly rocky composition and an equilibrium temperature of ~2000 K, may have a volatile envelope (containing molecules made from a combination of C, H, O, N, S, and P elements) that accounts for up to a few percent of its radius 7–13. The planet has been observed extensively with transmission spectroscopy 14–22, and its thermal emission has been measured in broad photometric bands 23–26. These observations disfavor a primordial H2/He-dominated atmosphere but cannot conclusively determine whether the planet has a secondary atmosphere27,28. Here we report a thermal emission spectrum of the planet obtained by JWST’s NIRCam and MIRI instruments from 4 to 12 μm. The measurements rule out the scenario where the planet is a lava world shrouded by a tenuous atmosphere made of vaporized rock29–32, and indicate a bona fide volatile atmosphere likely rich in CO2 or CO. This atmosphere can be outgassed from and sustained by a magma ocean.


Abstract said:
and indicate a bona fide volatile atmosphere likely rich in CO2 or CO

So, maybe lots of soda cans opened there, or lots of combustion engines? Or both? :smile:
Seriously, I think it's fascinating.

Edit: The planet in question is 55 Cancri e.

Edit 2:

And an article:

Webb discovers evidence of an atmosphere around a rocky super-Earth planet orbiting a Sun-like star
(BBC Sky At Night Magazine, by Iain Todd, May 8, 2024)
 
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  • #497

NASA’s Webb Reveals Long-Studied Star Is Actually Twins​

https://www.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-reveals-long-studied-star-is-actually-twins/

Scientists recently got a big surprise from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope when they turned the observatory toward a group of young stars called WL 20. The region has been studied since the 1970s with at least five telescopes, but it took Webb’s unprecedented resolution and specialized instruments to reveal that what researchers long thought was one of the stars, WL 20S, is actually a pair that formed about 2 million to 4 million years ago.

The discovery was made using Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) and was presented at the 244th meeting of the American Astronomical Society on June 12. MIRI also found that the twins have matching jets of gas streaming into space from their north and south poles.
:oops:

The team got another surprise when additional observations by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), a group of more than 60 radio antennas in Chile, revealed that disks of dust and gas encircle both stars. Based on the stars’ age, it’s possible that planets are forming in those disks.

The combined results indicate that the twin stars are nearing the end of this early period of their lives, which means scientists will have the opportunity to learn more about how the stars transition from youth into adulthood.

 
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  • #498
A lensed quasar captured by Webb. RX J1131-1231

Z= 0.658, approx 6 Gly from earth.

From https://esawebb.org/images/potm2406a/

“A small image of a galaxy distorted by gravitational lensing into a dim ring. At the top of the ring are three very bright spots with diffraction spikes coming off them, right next to each other: these are copies of a single quasar in the lensed galaxy, duplicated by the gravitational lens. In the centre of the ring, the elliptical galaxy doing the lensing appears as a small blue dot.”

1720439307800.png



From Wiki

“About a million quasars have been identified with reliable spectroscopic redshifts,[6] and between 2-3 million identified in photometric catalogs.[7][8] The nearest known quasar is about 600 million light-years from Earth. The record for the most distant known quasar continues to change. In 2017, quasar ULAS J1342+0928 was detected at redshift z = 7.54. Light observed from this 800-million-solar-mass quasar was emitted when the universe was only 690 million years old.[9][10][11] In 2020, quasar Pōniuāʻena was detected from a time only 700 million years after the Big Bang, and with an estimated mass of 1.5 billion times the mass of the Sun.[12][13] In early 2021, the quasar QSO J0313–1806, with a 1.6-billion-solar-mass black hole, was reported at z = 7.64, 670 million years after the Big Bang.[14]”
 
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  • #499
Happy birthday JWST.

Screenshot_2024-07-13-12-18-23-960.jpeg
 
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  • #503
The smaller spiral on the left, catalogued as IC 2163, is moving behind NGC 2207, the spiral galaxy on the right.


1730727416268.png
 
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  • #504
Sombrero galaxy is around 30 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Virgo.

1732714091447.png


From phys.org this week.

"General Observer time with Webb is more competitive than ever. A record-breaking 2,377 proposals were submitted by the 15 October 2024 deadline, requesting about 78,000 hours of observation time. This is an oversubscription rate—the ratio defining the observation hours requested versus the actual time available in one year of Webb's operations—of around 9 to 1."
 
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  • #505
pinball1970 said:
Sombrero galaxy is around 30 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Virgo.

View attachment 353917

From phys.org this week.

"General Observer time with Webb is more competitive than ever. A record-breaking 2,377 proposals were submitted by the 15 October 2024 deadline, requesting about 78,000 hours of observation time. This is an oversubscription rate—the ratio defining the observation hours requested versus the actual time available in one year of Webb's operations—of around 9 to 1."
Wow, this is awesome. Folks are wanting to use Webb more than there is time in a year. Hopefully, this means the telescope can be used for a few decades just as Hubble is almost 35 years old.
 
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  • #506
AlexB23 said:
Wow, this is awesome. Folks are wanting to use Webb more than there is time in a year. Hopefully, this means the telescope can be used for a few decades just as Hubble is almost 35 years old.
Your logic escapes me. The fact that it is oversubscribed (and will likely remain so for decades, if we are lucky enough to have it last that long) has no bearing on its longevity.
 
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  • #507
phinds said:
Your logic escapes me. The fact that it is oversubscribed (and will likely remain so for decades, if we are lucky enough to have it last that long) has no bearing on its longevity.
It increases the probability of repair missions.
 
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  • #508
phinds said:
Your logic escapes me. The fact that it is oversubscribed (and will likely remain so for decades, if we are lucky enough to have it last that long) has no bearing on its longevity.
Yeah, but the government may fund the telescope for longer if it remains so popular.
 
  • #509
Frabjous said:
It increases the probability of repair missions.
Aren't repair missions out of the question with regards to its location?
 
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  • #510
Arjan82 said:
Aren't repair missions out of the question with regards to its location?
Depends what you mean by repair, they can do things remotely, I would check out the work arounds they did remotely to Voyager 2. More primitive kit and further away (a lot)
 
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