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The James Webb Space Telescope is working as well as astronomers dreamed it would

This image of a star was taken as part of the evaluation process as the James Webb Space Telescope's mirror segments were carefully aligned.
NASA / STScI
This image of a star was taken as part of the evaluation process as the James Webb Space Telescope's mirror segments were carefully aligned.

A supersharp image of a bright star — released by NASA — shows that the optics seem to be working perfectly on the James Webb Space Telescope.

The $10 billion infrared telescope launched in December after decades of development and construction, and it thrilled astronomers when it successfully unfolded itself out in space.

Now scientists say that its 18 separate mirror segments have been precisely aligned so that they can act as one giant mirror that's about 21 feet across.

"When the first images came down, we were in the mission control center and it was a very emotional moment," says Lee Feinberg, Webb's optical telescope element manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "I'm happy to say that the optical performance of the telescope is absolutely phenomenal. It is really working extremely well."

During the alignment process, astronomers would aim the telescope at bright stars. Earlier pictures released by NASA showed how the segments would act like individual telescopes, with each returning a separate image of the same star.

The primary mirror of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope consists of 18 hexagonal mirrors. The telescope is now in space with its mirror segments aligned.
Chris Gunn / NASA
/
NASA
The primary mirror of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope consists of 18 hexagonal mirror segments. The telescope is now in space with its mirror segments aligned.

Now, though, the mirror segments can work together. And the results are everything that astronomers dared to hope for.

"As we were focusing on those bright stars, we couldn't help but see the rest of the universe coming into focus behind them, to see the more distant stars and galaxies coming into view," says Marshall Perrin, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. "And honestly, the team was giddy at times, just seeing this happen."

"There is no way to look at these data and not be excited at the scientific possibilities that are opening up here," Perrin says.

Weeks of engineering work are still ahead before the telescope is ready to do science; it still needs to be fully set up to work with all its different instruments.

Starting this summer, though, it should be able to gather light that shows how some of the first galaxies looked, just a couple of hundred million years after the Big Bang. The telescope will also be used to probe the atmospheres of planets that orbit distant stars, searching for any chemical signatures that might indicate the presence of life.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Nell Greenfieldboyce is a NPR science correspondent.
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