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The James Webb Telescope Images Explained
Live Science
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6 hours ago
The most powerful telescope in history.
The James Webb Space Telescope's "jewel-filled" photos are stunning.
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Tech
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00:00
From the birthing places of baby stars, to a dying star's dramatic death rose, from
00:05
an image of five galaxies locked in an endless cosmic ballet, to a view of the cosmos that's
00:11
so deep it takes us back to the very beginnings of galaxies themselves.
00:16
The James Webb Space Telescope's first ever images are here, and they're absolutely mind-melting.
00:22
The five new full-colour photos, released by NASA this week as test images of the brand
00:32
new James Webb Space Telescope, show our universe in unprecedented, breathtaking detail.
00:39
NASA has said they're only the beginning.
00:42
The $10 billion telescope, designed as a replacement to the Hubble Space Telescope, is a hundred
00:48
times more powerful than its predecessor, and able to take highly detailed snapshots of
00:53
our universe in a matter of days.
00:56
The telescope was launched into space on Christmas Day, and spent six months calibrating its instruments
01:02
and unfurling its 21-foot-wide gold-plated primary mirror.
01:08
Since coming online, the James Webb has been taking all kinds of test images in preparation
01:14
for its planned two decades of service, studying our cosmos.
01:19
NASA has released five of those test images this week, all specially chosen to show how
01:24
the telescope can help astronomers discover more about our cosmos.
01:30
First on the list, is Stefan's Quintet, a group of five tightly bound galaxies, located
01:37
290 million light-years away.
01:41
Four of these galaxies are constantly circling around each other, locked in a cosmic dance
01:46
of repeated close encounters.
01:49
Scientists hope that by studying this dancing quintet, they could gain some insights into dark
01:55
matter, the mysterious substance believed to make up most of the universe's matter.
02:01
Next is this image of the Carina Nebula, a dust and gas cloud 7600 light-years from Earth,
02:10
and one of the brightest and most active star-forming regions ever discovered.
02:15
It is home to many stars much larger than our sun, making it an attractive place to look for clues
02:21
into the beginnings of our solar system, as well as its dramatic finale.
02:27
On the subject of dying stars, the third image in NASA's teaser is the Southern Ring Nebula, also known as
02:34
the eight-burst for its figure eight appearance. Positioned around 2000 light-years from Earth,
02:39
the Nebula is an expanding cloud of gas and dust spewed out by the death throes of a red dwarf star.
02:47
As the Nebula's dust particles are particularly rich in heavy elements such as carbon, these remnants
02:53
could one day go on to form new stars and planets, giving us a fascinating peek into the cosmic cycle
03:00
of death and rebirth. The fourth snapshot wasn't so much an image, but the first full colour spectrum
03:08
of Wasp 96b, a giant, mostly gaseous exoplanet that's half the mass of Jupiter and is located
03:16
nearly 1150 light-years from Earth. First discovered in 2014, Wasp 96b is so close to its sun that a single
03:25
orbit takes just 3.4 Earth days. By studying the way light is absorbed and re-emitted by this planet's
03:31
atmosphere, the web was able to detect water vapour. If scientists can spot molecules like methane or
03:38
carbon dioxide on other planets, they could use it as a way to hunt for life beyond our solar system.
03:44
And we've saved the best till last. This image, called the web's first deep field, shows a cluster of
03:51
galaxies with a combined gravity that is so strong they act as a gigantic magnifying lens, warping and
03:58
concentrating distant starlight in an effect called gravitational lensing. This doesn't just enable us
04:04
to see deeper into the universe, but because light travels at a fixed speed, allows us to detect older
04:10
light emitted further back in the universe past, an optical time machine through which we can glimpse
04:16
the faintest glimmerings of starlight from the first ever galaxies. Now, if none of this has melted
04:22
your brain so far, every light source in this image that doesn't have the characteristic diffraction
04:27
spikes of a star is a galaxy, and each galaxy here contains billions of stars and trillions of worlds.
04:34
All of this is contained within an image that is just the tiniest slice of sky, the equivalent of
04:39
holding a sand grain up at arm's length. And for all the unprecedented and staggering depth in this
04:46
image, it took the James Webb just 12 and a half hours to capture it. And these images are just the
04:52
beginning. Now that the telescope is in operation, scientists from all over the world will be using it
04:57
to explore space like it has never been explored before. We don't know yet what the James Webb Space
05:02
Telescope will teach us, but one thing we do know for certain is that our understanding of our universe
05:08
is about to be changed forever.
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