James Webb Telescope Terrifying Alien Planet Discovery Will Change Everything!


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James Webb Telescope Terrifying Alien Planet Discovery Will Change Everything!

James Webb Telescope Terrifying Alien Planet Discovery Will Change Everything

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The James Webb Space Telescope cost ten billion dollars and consumed countless person-hours. It is also the most complex and powerful space telescope ever built by humans. So, expectations are high for this brand new eye in deep space! One of these
expectations is what scientists have been grappling with for ages; is there life elsewhere in the universe? Are there aliens there waiting to contact us? One of the areas the James Webb Space Telescope may find aliens or life signals is Hycean planets.




Can the new space telescope find life out there? Join us as we dive into how the new James Webb Telescope will discover alien life!
Few space missions have taxed NASA and the whole space scientific community as the James Webb Telescope! With a cost that ended up being ten times the original budget, and multiple delays, including the new cancellation of the program by the Senate,
everybody involved breathed a half sigh of relief, if there is ever anything like that!

Everything about the JWST was complex, yet the team launching it had only one shot at getting it right. This was because it would be situated where it was impossible to send a repair mission, one million away from the Earth at a place known as the Lagrange 2 point!
That orbit is unique because it lets the telescope stay in line with the Earth as it moves around the Sun. This allows the satellite’s large sunshield to protect the telescope from the light and heat of the Sun, Earth, and Moon! JWST primarily observes infrared light, which can sometimes be felt as heat. Because the telescope will observe the faint infrared signals of very distant objects, it needs to be shielded from any bright, hot sources, including from the
satellite itself! The sunshield serves to separate the
sensitive mirrors and instruments from not only the Sun, Earth, and Moon, but also the
spacecraft bus. To get an idea of the heat shield, the temperature difference between
the hot and cold sides of the telescope is enormous; you could almost boil water on the
hot side and freeze nitrogen on the chilly side! The telescope will operate at about 225
degrees below zero Celsius (minus 370 Fahrenheit.
To have the sunshield be effective protection-it gives the telescope the equivalent of SPF one million sunscreen-against the light and heat of the Sun/Earth/Moon, these bodies all have to be located in the same direction.




The JWST spent the first day after launch executing the first and most crucial trajectory correction maneuver using small rocket engines aboard the telescope itself. It also released and deployed the high gain antenna to enable the highest available data communication rates as early as possible. During the first week, the JWST executed a second trajectory correction maneuver and began the sequence of significant deployments, beginning with the fore and aft sunshield pallets. The next step was separating the spacecraft bus and telescope by extending the telescoping tower between them. The tower extended about 2 meters and had to be extended so that the rest of the sunshield deployment could proceed. Next, the sunshield membranes were unpinned, and the telescoping sunshield midbooms extended, pulling the membranes
out with them. The last step in the sunshield deployment step was tensioning of the membranes. In the meantime, other things like radiators were released and deployed.

JWST finished deploying the telescope structures during the second week by unfolding and latching the secondary mirror tripod and rotating and latching the two primary mirror wings. And near the end of the first month, it executed the last mid-course maneuver to
insert into the optimum orbit around L2. The various scientific instruments were also powered up.
Kudos to the launch team because due to the flawlessness of the process, the service life of the space telescope has been extended. Previously, NASA expected the fuel in the telescope to last about ten years. But thanks to the efficiency of the lau


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