NASA reveals the content of the first images of the James Webb Telescope

by time news

NASA is preparing to reveal the first images taken by the James Webb Telescope, showing unprecedented views of distant galaxies and luminous nebulae, as well as a distant gas giant planet.

  • James Webb telescope

The first images taken by the James Webb telescope show unprecedented views of distant galaxies and luminous nebulae, as well as a distant gas giant planet, NASA reported.

The US, European and Canadian space agencies are preparing to unveil on July 12 the first images taken by the $10 billion telescope, which was launched as a successor to the Hubble telescope, on a mission to explore the history of the universe.

“I’m really looking forward to being free of these mysteries, and revealing the images will be a great relief to me,” Klaus Pontopedan, an astronaut at the Observatory for Space Sciences that oversees James Webb, told AFP last week.

And an international committee decided that the first batch of color scientific images to be revealed will be the Carina Nebula (the Base Nebula), a huge cloud of dust and gas 7,600 light-years away, in addition to the Southern Ring Nebula, which surrounds a dying star 2,000 light-years away from Earth. .

The “Carina” nebula is famous for its giant pillar, which includes the “Misty Mountain”, a region in the nebula whose pillar measures three light-years and was captured by the Hubble telescope.

James Webb captured a picture of WASP-96 b, a gas giant planet that was discovered in 2014.

This planet is about 1150 light-years from Earth, and its size is about half the size of Jupiter, while orbiting its star in just 3.4 days.

James Webb also took a picture of the Stephan Quintet, a group of galaxies 290 million light-years from Earth. “Four of the five galaxies in Stephan’s Quintet are trapped in frequent close shocks,” NASA noted.

Perhaps the most awaited image is an image taken by the telescope using forward galaxy clusters called “SMACS 0723” as a kind of cosmic magnifying glass for the distant and very weak galaxies behind it.

This technique, known as “gravitational lensing”, uses the mass of the foreground galaxies to repel the light of objects behind them, similar to what happens in glasses.

“James Webb made a scientific breakthrough as soon as he took his first pictures,” Dan Koo, an astronaut at the Institute of Space Science Observatories, told AFP on Friday.

“When I first saw the images of this deep range of galaxies, I just stared at them and quickly inferred three things about the universe that I didn’t know before, which really amazed me,” he said.

James Webb is able, more than any previous telescope, to monitor the first stars and galaxies that formed after the Big Bang, which occurred 13.8 billion years ago, thanks to its infrared sensors.

As the universe expands, the light emitted by the first stars has changed from ultraviolet and visible wavelengths that were emitted in them, to longer infrared wavelengths that James Webb has been equipped with instruments to capture with unprecedented accuracy.

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