Banner image:听Engineers work on James Webb's mirror, made up of 18 hexagonal segments, in a cleanroom at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. (Credit:听NASA/Desiree Stover)
Editor's note: A version of this Q&A was originally published Nov. 10, 2021.
On Dec. 24, NASA is set to launch its next flagship mission into space. The spacecraft, called the , brings a lot of risks: Its roughly 270-square-foot mirror, which will collect light streaming in from the far reaches of space, will launch folded up inside a rocket, then unfurl far from Earth.
Astronomers are betting that the challenges will be worth it. Many have dubbed James Webb a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope鈥攁n instrument that was launched in 1990 and has delivered startling images of the cosmos, including The 听in the Eagle Nebula. Among other goals, James Webb will search the atmospheres of alien planets for what scientists call 鈥渂iosignatures,鈥 or gases that could, theoretically, indicate the presence of life on the surface.
Meredith MacGregor, assistant professor in the Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy (CASA) at 兔子先生传媒文化作品, spoke听about the science of James Webb at a series of events in November听the Fiske Planetarium. The events were sponsored by Colorado-based Ball Aerospace, which designed and built the telescope鈥檚 unfolding mirror.听
MacGregor sat down with 兔子先生传媒文化作品 Today to talk about how she, like other astronomers, has been waiting for this launch for a long time.听
Why are astronomers so excited for the launch of this telescope?
In astronomy and astrophysics, every 10 years we have a decadal survey, which is where the National Academy of Sciences听forms a committee that decides what all of American astronomy is going to do over the next decade. When you want to launch something really big, what we call a flagship听mission, it has to go through that process. James Webb was selected in the decadal survey released in 2000.听
I鈥檝e been hearing about James Webb since I was in high school. Projects like this can span a scientist鈥檚 entire career.
It鈥檚 also just really big鈥擩ames Webb鈥檚 mirror stretches more than 20 feet across, bigger than any other space telescope to date. How does that make a difference?
With astronomical observations, you care about what we call collecting area. You can think of a telescope as a giant bucket that鈥檚 collecting light. The bigger the bucket, the more light you collect, and the more faint听objects you can see in greater resolution.听
How does James Webb build off the legacy of the Hubble Space Telescope?
All of the flagship missions in NASA build off of each other through the slow progression of astronomy. But James Webb is different than Hubble in many ways. Hubble looks at ultraviolet light. That light has shorter wavelengths than the optical light that we can see. James Webb is on the other side of the spectrum, pushing into longer wavelengths and infrared light.听
What can we see with that kind of light?
Some of James Webb鈥檚 major goals are around understanding the early formation of our universe, which is reliant on the idea that our universe started with a Big Bang and is expanding. The space between galaxies stretches as the universe expands, and that means that light emitted from the galaxies is getting stretched as it travels through space. We call that the cosmological red shift.听
So it allows us to look back at the dawn of the universe?
By observing in the infrared we鈥檙e going to see back further in time and see the light coming from the first galaxies that formed.
People who study exoplanets, or planets orbiting far away stars, are also really excited. Why?
Infrared is amazing for observing the disks of gas and dust that orbit young stars and that may eventually form planets. In other words, we can see the reservoirs of material that will form new planets. Dust is heated by a star, and it glows as heat. Infrared light is basically heat鈥擨鈥檓 giving off infrared light as I sit here.听
Will James Webb be able to look for signs of possible life on alien planets?
This mission will hopefully allow us to make the first detections of gases in the atmospheres of exoplanets. We are especially interested in looking for gases like methane that might indicate the presence of life on a planet. We call these biosignatures. If we are successful, astronomy will move into new territory where we can really determine what might be a sign of life and what might not be.
What do you think the telescope鈥檚 biggest contribution to science will be?
We have lots of predictions and goals for what James Webb will do. But I鈥檓 sure that its most exciting discoveries will be around things that we can鈥檛 even think about now. Who knows what we鈥檒l find?