News on Spacetelescopes
- 1000 days of infrared wonders
- Teamwork: IBEX and TWINS Observe a Solar Storm
- Kepler mission extended 4 years
- New spacetelescope to hover above the solar system
- US/Japan Solar probe moves to next design-phase
- New "weapon" will spy on black holes
- New agreement on European X-ray space-telescope
- The James Webb Telescope mirror completes tests
- Biggest spaceborn CCD ready
- Hubbles 1 millionth observation
- James Webb Spacetelescope mirror complete
- Next Space-telescope takes a spin
- Another 93 Gigabytes of data online
- Gigantic X-ray space telescope
- The maiden flight of the Sofia IR observatory
- WISE mosaic of the Heart-nebula
- Hubble anniversary: 20 years in space
- NASAs new solar observatory first light
- An avalanche of asteroids
- WISE captures an interstellar factory
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James Webb Spacetelescope mirror complete
Friday, 01 July 2011 11:30
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| Spaceflight - Spacetelescopes |
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Mirrors are a critical part of a telescope. The quality is crucial, so completion of mirror polishing represents a major milestone. All of the mirrors that will fly aboard NASA's James Webb Space Telescope have been polished so the observatory can see objects as far away as the first galaxies in the universe. The Webb telescope is comprised of four types of mirrors. The primary one has an area of approximately 25m2, which will enable scientists to capture light from faint, distant objects in the universe faster than any previous space observatory. The mirrors are made of Beryllium and will work together to relay images of the sky to the telescope's science cameras. For related images and more information about the mirrors, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/features/webb-mirrors-done.html |




