By Thomas Ling

Published: Friday, 07 January 2022 at 12:00 am


After many delays, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has finally been launched into space! Now working its way to its final destination, deploying mirrors and essential components on the way, the James Webb Space Telescope begins its long and lonely journey into space.

The successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA’s new and much improved space observatory has several goals in mind for its trip into space. Not only will it be used to deepen our understanding of the Milky Way but also far-away exoplanets, celestial objects and locate evidence of dark matter.

But what is the timeline of the JWST, how does it differ from the Hubble and who is James Webb, the man the telescope is named after? We’ve answered these questions and more below.

When will the James Webb Space Telescope launch?

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An Ariane 5 rocket during launch in 2017 © Getty

The telescope was launched into space on the 24th December 2021 – a nice Christmas Eve surprise for any fans of space! If you were too busy opening presents and enjoying a Christmas dinner to watch, you can view the launch on the JWST YouTube channel.

While the telescope has now officially launched, it saw a huge number of delays to get to this point. The observatory was originally expected to launch back in 2007. Since then, it has experienced over 16 launch delays with the pandemic extending the date way past the last expected date of March 2021.

The telescope was launched on the Ariane 5 rocket. This is a specialised rocket which is designed to take satellites and other payloads into transfer or low-Earth orbit.

Who is James Webb?

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James Webb in 1966 © Getty

You might be thinking, who gets the honour of having such a historic telescope named after them? Well, that title goes to James Edwin Webb, the second administrator of NASA, best known for heading up Apollo – the first space programme to send humans to the Moon.

He was also instrumental in the two crewed space programmes that followed on from Apollo: Mercury and Gemini. While Webb did eventually die in 1992, aged 85, he left a massive legacy behind, deserving of a telescope named after him.

“It is fitting that Hubble’s successor be named in honour of James Webb. Thanks to his efforts, we got our first glimpses at the dramatic landscape of outer space,” said former NASA administrator Sean O’Keefe about the observatory’s name. “He took our nation on its first voyages of exploration, turning our imagination into reality.”

The telescope hasn’t always been named after Webb. It started its life being known as the Next Generation Space Telescope which, realistically, isn’t the most imaginative name we’ve ever heard!

What will the telescope do after its launch?

For a long time, all of the attention was on the launch of the telescope but now that is out of the way, we can look at what its timeline will look like. Luckily, NASA has given a full break-down of the telescope’s official timeline.

In the first month, the satellite will start to deploy its many components. In this stage, the telescope and instruments will rapidly cool thanks to the sunshield but it takes weeks for them to cool to stable temperatures. At this stage, mirrors will be deployed and tests will be made to be sure they move.

For the next couple of months after this, the satellite will begin its tests. Using the Fine Guidance Sensor, the JWST will be pointed at a bright star to demonstrate it can acquire and lock onto targets. Then, the long process of aligning the telescope optics begins.

After this, calibrations will be made on all of the scientific instrument’s different modes of operation. In this stage, observations will commence, tracking moving targets like asteroids, comets, moons and planets in our own solar system. From this point onwards, Webb will begin its science mission, conducting routine science missions and reporting back information.

Where is the James Webb telescope now?

While the easy answer would be to say simply moving through space, NASA is allowing everyone to keep up with the telescope’s exact movements. On the JWST section of the NASA website, you can see the exact distance from earth, how much distance has been completed, what stage they are on and more.

How big is the James Webb Space Telescope?

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NASA employees stand by a full-scale replica of the James Webb Telescope © NASA

Billed as the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, the JWST is the largest space observatory ever built. Its gigantic sunshield base measures a massive 22m by 12m, roughly the same size as a tennis court.

Although nearly twice as big as Hubble (which is only 13m long), the JWST is almost half the weight at 6,500kg.

The JWST’s gold-plated mirrors have a total diameter of 6.5m, much larger than Hubble’s 2.4m diameter plate. Overall, the JWST will have approximately a 15 times wider view than Hubble.

How far can the James Webb Space Telescope see?

Using its infra-red telescope, the JWST observatory will examine objects over 13.6 billion light-years away.

Because of the time it takes light to travel across the Universe, this means that the JWST will effectively be looking at objects 13.6 billion years ago, an estimated 100 to 250 million years after the Big Bang. This is the furthest back in time ever observed by humanity.

Where will the James Webb Space Telescope orbit?