The
James Webb Space Telescope
(
JWST) is a planned
infrared space
observatory, the partial successor to the aging
Hubble Space Telescope. The JWST will
not be a complete successor, because it will not be sensitive to
all of the light wavelengths that Hubble can see. The main
scientific goal is to observe the most distant objects in the
universe, those beyond the reach of either
ground based instruments or the Hubble.
The JWST project is a
NASA
-led international collaboration with contributors
in fifteen nations, the European Space Agency
and the Canadian
Space Agency.
Originally called the
Next Generation Space Telescope
(NGST), it was renamed in 2002 after NASA's second
administrator,
James E. Webb (1906-1992). Webb had headed NASA from
the beginning of the Kennedy administration through the Johnson
administration (1961-68), thus overseeing all the manned launches
in the Mercury through Gemini programs, until just before the first
manned Apollo flight.
Current plans call for the telescope to be launched on an
Ariane 5 rocket in June 2014, on a five-year
mission (10 year goal). The JWST will reside in
solar orbit near the Sun-Earth
L2 point, which is on a line passing from the Sun
to the Earth, but about 1.5 million km farther away from the Sun
than is the Earth. This position, which moves around the Sun in
exact orbital synchrony with the Earth, will allow JWST to shield
itself from infrared from both Sun and Earth, by using a single
radiation shield positioned between the telescope and the Sun-Earth
direction.
Mission
The JWST's primary scientific mission has four main components: to
search for
light from the first
stars and
galaxies which formed
in the
Universe after the
Big Bang, to study the
formation and evolution of
galaxies, to understand the
formation
of stars and
planetary system,
and to study
planetary systems and
the
origins of life. All of these
jobs are more effectively done in the near-infrared than the
visible.
Due to a combination of
redshift, dust
obscuration, and the intrinsically low temperatures of many of the
sources to be studied, the JWST must operate at
infrared wavelengths, spanning the wavelength range
from 0.6 to 28
micrometres. In order to
ensure that the observations are not hampered by infrared emission
from the telescope and instruments themselves, the entire
observatory must be cold. It must be well-shielded from the
Sun so that it can radiatively cool to roughly
40
K (−233.15
°C, −387.67
°F). To
this end, JWST will incorporate a large metalized fan-fold
sunshield, which will unfurl to block infrared
radiation from the
Sun,
Earth and
Moon. The telescope's
location at the
Sun-Earth
Lagrange point ensures that
the Earth and Sun occupy roughly the same relative position in the
telescope's view, and thus make the operation of this shield
possible.
The
observatory is due to be launched no earlier than June 2014 and is
currently scheduled to be launched by an Ariane
5 from Guiana Space
Centre
Kourou, French Guiana
, into an orbit with a launch mass of approximately
6.2 tons. After a commissioning
period of approximately six months, the observatory will begin the
science mission, which is expected to last a minimum of five years.
The potential for extension of the science mission beyond this
period exists, and the observatory is being designed
accordingly.
Orbit

A diagram showing the five Lagrangian
points of the Sun-Earth system.
JWST will be located at L2, where the Earth and sun are
directly behind it at all times.
To avoid swamping the very faint astronomical signals with
radiation from the telescope, the telescope and its instruments
must be very cold. Therefore, JWST has a large shield that blocks
the light from the Sun, Earth, and Moon, which otherwise would heat
up the telescope, and interfere with the observations. To have this
work, JWST must be in an orbit where all three of these objects are
in about the same direction. The answer was to put JWST in an orbit
around the Earth-Sun
L2 point.
The orbit is an elliptical orbit about the semi-stable second
Lagrange point. The Earth-Sun point, about which the Webb telescope
will orbit, is 1.51 million km from the Earth, which is about 3.92
times farther away from Earth than is the moon. This distance
underscores how much more difficult the Webb telescope would be to
service, after launch.
In the case of JWST, the three bodies involved are the Sun, the
Earth and the JWST. Normally, an object circling the Sun further
out than the Earth would take more than one year to complete its
orbit. However, the balance of gravitational pull at the point (in
particular, the extra pull from Earth as well as the Sun) means
that JWST will keep up with the Earth as it goes around the Sun.
The combined gravitational forces of the Sun and the Earth can hold
a spacecraft at this point, so that in theory it takes no rocket
thrust to keep a spacecraft in orbit around .
Optics
Although JWST has a planned mass half that of the Hubble, its
primary mirror (a 6.5 meter diameter
gold-coated
beryllium
reflector) has a collecting area which is almost six times larger.
As this diameter is much larger than any current launch vehicle,
the mirror is composed of 18
hexagonal
segments, which will unfold after the telescope is launched.
These
mirrors are currently being developed by Axsys Technologies in Cullman,
Alabama
. Sensitive micromotors and a wavefront
sensor will position the mirror segments in the correct
location, but subsequent to this initial configuration they will
only rarely be moved; this process is therefore much like an
initial calibration, unlike terrestrial
telescopes like the Keck
which
continually adjust their mirror segments using active optics to overcome the effects of
gravitational and wind loading.
Ball Aerospace &
Technologies Corp. is the principal optical subcontractor for
the JWST program, led by prime contractor Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, under a
contract from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt,
Maryland
. Seventeen additional primary mirror
segments, secondary, and tertiary mirrors, plus flight spares, will
be delivered to Ball Aerospace from its beryllium mirror
manufacturing team that includes Axsys, Brush Wellman, and Tinsley
Laboratories. As each additional mirror is delivered to Ball
Aerospace over the next year (to 2010), it will be mounted onto a
lightweight, actuated strong-back assembly and undergo functional
and environmental testing.
NASA has indicated that they will be incorporating
microshutters, each about 100 by 200
micrometres, into the optics of the James
Webb Space Telescope's Near InfraRed Spectrograph. An array of
62,000 of the shutters will sit in front of the spectrograph's
8-megapixel infrared detector. The microshutters will create an
effect similar to a human eye
squint. When one squints, one's
eyelashes block light; in the same way, the
microshutters allow the telescope to focus on the faint light of
stars and galaxies even if they are adjacent to brighter
objects.
Current status

Comparison with Hubble primary
mirror
The JWST program is in the final design and fabrication phase
(Phase C). In March 2008, the project successfully completed its
Preliminary Design Review (PDR). In April 2008, the project passed
the Non-Advocate Review. The next major project milestone is the
overall Critical Design Review, currently scheduled for March
2010.
In January 2007 nine of the ten technology development items in the
program successfully passed a non-advocate review. These
technologies were deemed sufficiently mature to retire significant
risks in the program. The remaining technology development item
(the MIRI cryocooler) completed its technology maturation milestone
in April 2007. This technology review represented the beginning
step in the process that ultimately moved the program into its
detailed design phase (Phase C).
In April 2006 the program was independently reviewed following a
replanning phase begun in August 2005. The review concluded the
program was technically sound, but that funding phasing at NASA
needed to be changed. NASA has rephased its JWST budgets
accordingly. The August 2005 replanning was necessitated by the
cost growth revealed in Spring 2005. The primary technical outcomes
of the replanning are significant changes in the integration and
test plans, a 22-month launch delay (from 2011 to 2013), and
elimination of system level testing for observatory modes at
wavelength shorter than 1.7 micrometres. Other major features of
the observatory are unchanged following the replanning
efforts.
As of the 2005 re-plan, the life-cycle cost of the project was
estimated at about
US$4.5
billion. This comprises approximately US$3.5 billion for design,
development, launch and commissioning, and approximately US$1.0
billion for ten years of operations. ESA is contributing about
€300million, including the launch, and the
Canadian Space Agency about $39M Canadian. costs were still on
target.
Construction and engineering
NASA's
Goddard Space
Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Maryland is leading the management of
the observatory project. The project scientist for the James
Webb Space Telescope is
John C.
Mather.
Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems serves
as the primary contractor for the development and integration of
the observatory. They are responsible for developing and building
the spacecraft element, which includes both the
spacecraft bus and
sunshield.
Ball
Aerospace has been subcontracted to develop and build the
Optical Telescope Element (OTE).
Goddard Space Flight Center
is also responsible for providing the Integrated
Science Instrument Module (ISIM).
The ISIM contains four science instruments. NIRCam (Near InfraRed
Camera) is an infrared imager which will have a spectral coverage
ranging from the edge of the visible (0.6 micrometres) through
the Near Infrared (5 micrometres). The NIRCam will also serve
as the observatory's wavefront sensor, which is required for
wavefront sensing and control activities.
The NIRCam is being
built by a team led by the University of Arizona
, with Principal Investigator Marcia Rieke. The industrial partner is
Lockheed-Martin's Advanced
Technology Center located in Palo Alto, California.
In addition to the Near Infrared (NIR) imaging capabilities of the
NIRCam, the observatory will also perform
spectrography over this range with the NIRSpec
(Near InfraRed Spectrograph).
NIRSpec is being built by the European Space
Agency
at ESTEC
in Noordwijk
, the Netherlands
, leading a team involving EADS Astrium, Ottobrunn, and Friedrichshafen,
Germany, and the Goddard Space Flight Center
: the NIRSpec project scientist is Peter Jakobsen. The NIRSpec design
provides 3 observing modes: a low resolution mode using a prism, an
R~1000 multi-object mode and an R~2700 integral field unit or
long-slit spectroscopy mode. Switching of the modes is done by
operating a wavelength preselection mechanism called Filter Wheel
Assembly and selecting a correspondent dispersive element (prism or
grating) using the Grating Wheel Assembly mechanism. Both
mechanisms are based on the successful ISOPHOT wheel mechanisms of
the
Infrared Space
Observatory. The mechanisms and their optical elements are
being designed, integrated and tested by
Carl Zeiss Optronics GmbH of Oberkochen,
Germany, under contract from Astrium.
The mid-IR wavelength range will be measured by the MIRI (Mid
InfraRed Instrument), which contains both a
mid-IR camera and
spectrometer that has
a spectral range extending from 5 to 27 micrometres.
MIRI is
being developed as a collaboration between NASA and a consortium of
European countries, and is led by George
Rieke (University
of Arizona
) and Gillian
Wright (UK Astronomy Technology
Centre
, Edinburgh, part of the Science and Technology
Facilities Council (STFC)). MIRI features similar wheel mechanisms as
NIRSpec which are also developed and built by Carl Zeiss Optronics
GmbH under contract from the Max Planck
Institute for Astronomy
, Heidelberg.
The FGS (Fine Guidance Sensor), led by the
Canadian Space Agency under project
scientist John Hutchings (Dominion Astrophysical Observatory,
Victoria), is used to stabilize the line-of-sight of the
observatory during science observations and also includes a
'Tunable Filter module for astronomical narrow-band imaging in the
1.5 to 5 micrometre wavelength range. The infrared detectors
for both the NIRCam and NIRSpec modules are being provided by
Teledyne Imaging Sensors (formerly Rockwell Scientific
Company).
NASA is considering plans to add a grapple feature so future
spacecraft might visit the observatory to fix gross deployment
problems, such as a stuck solar panel or antenna. However, the
telescope itself would not be serviceable, so that astronauts would
not be able to do things such as swapping out instruments, as has
been done with the Hubble Telescope. Final approval for such an
addition was to be considered as part of the Preliminary Design
Review in March 2008.
Most of the data processing on the telescope is done by
conventional single board computers. The conversion of the analog
science data to digital form is performed by the custom-built
SIDECAR ASIC (
System for
Image
Digitization,
Enhancement,
Control
And
Retrieval
Application
Specific
Integrated
Circuit). It is said that the SIDECAR ASIC will
include all the functions of a 20-pound instrument box in a package
the size of a half-dollar, and consume only 11 milliwatts of
power. Since this conversion must be done close to the detectors,
on the cool side of the telescope, the low power use of this IC
will be important for maintaining the low temperature required for
optimal operation of the JWST.
Ground support
The
Space
Telescope Science Institute
(STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland
has been selected as the Science and Operations
Center (S&OC) for JWST. In this capacity, STScI will be
responsible for the scientific operation of the telescope and
delivery of data products to the astronomical community.
Public displays
In May
2007 a full-scale model of the telescope was assembled for display
at the Smithsonian
's National Air and Space Museum
on the National Mall
, Washington DC
. The model was intended to give the viewing
public a better understanding of the size, scale and complexity of
the satellite. The model is significantly different from the
telescope, as the model must withstand gravity and weather, so is
constructed mainly of aluminum and steel measuring approximately x
x and weighs .
The model
has been on display at various places since 2005: Seattle,
Washington
; Colorado Springs, Colorado
; Paris,
France
; Greenbelt, Maryland
; Rochester, New York
; Orlando,
Florida
; Dublin,
Ireland
; Montreal,
Canada
; Hatfield, United Kingdom
and Munich, Germany
. The model was built by the main contractor,
Northrop Grumman Aerospace
Systems.
See also
References
- jwst.nasa.gov
- Gardner, p. 588.
- Gardner, table XV, p. 597
- Gardner, p. 560.
- Gardner, p. 574.
- Gardner, p. 578.
- Gardner, p. 580
- Gardner, p. 585
- Webb Slinger Heads To Washington, accessed 8
May 2007
Further reading
- The formal case for the JWST science, plus some
implementation.
External links
Science instrument teams