One year on – What the James Webb Space Telescope showed us
Despite not being operational for the full year, the James Webb Space Telescope has already accomplished a lot in just one year.
Despite not being operational for the full year, the James Webb Space Telescope has already accomplished a lot in just one year.
On Tuesday we will see the first full-colour images of our universe captured by the James Webb Space Telescope.
Full resolution imagery and science data from the James Webb Space Telescope will be released sometime between June and September 2022.
After many years of planning, the James Webb Space Telescope will arrive at its home for the remainder of its life.
The more than six metre wide mirror that will help the James Webb Space Telescope see back in time have been successfully unfolded.
After decades of construction and many delays, the James Webb Space Telescope will launch from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana at 14:30 CAT on Friday.
A communication issue between the observatory and launch vehicle system has pushed the launch of the most expensive space telescope ever out once again.
While attaching the James Webb Space Telescope to the launch rocket a clamp failed and the observatory vibrated so now NASA needs to check for any damage.
The James Webb Space Telescope will orbit Earth from 1.5 million kilometres away and help us peer back in time to the early formation of the universe.
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured the centre of our galaxy giving astronomers insight into how stars are formed.
The two telescopes provided different views of the collision for astronomers and scientists to study.
The ESA has shared images comparing images captured by the JWST’s MIRI instrument to images captured by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope which launched in 2003.