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  • And liftoff of the Space Shuttle Discovery with the Hubble Space Telescope.

  • Before the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990, we didn’t know how old the universe

  • was.

  • We had never seen a planet outside of our solar system.

  • We didn’t even know about dark energy!

  • Hubble taught us a lot, but it can only see so far, and in so much detail.

  • To see farther, all the way back to the formation of the very first stars and galaxies (what’s

  • known as the universe’s first light) were going to need a bigger telescope.

  • And that is exactly what started the largest, most expensive, and most challenging space

  • engineering project humans have ever attempted: the James Webb Space Telescope.

  • It’s been over 30 years since work on this massive machine began, so when will it be

  • ready?

  • And how close are we to using it to see the universe’s first light?

  • Since its beginning, the James Webb Space Telescope has involved thousands of scientists

  • and engineers all over the globe.

  • But all this work raises the question, what’s so important about creating a telescope that’s

  • able to see the universe’s first galaxies?

  • The Hubble Space Telescope has been absolutely revolutionary in changing the way that we

  • understand the universe.

  • But we're really missing a key piece of the puzzle.

  • We're missing the very start of how galaxies got started

  • When you know how they formed, when you understand the situation

  • that this galaxy arised from, you understand the evolution, the forces at work, and a better

  • picture of what the universe was like back then.

  • It'll help us do things like predict what will happen to the stars and galaxies in our

  • universe further on.

  • What's going to happen at the end of everything?

  • And if finding out how the world ends isn’t enough for you, Webb will be able to do a

  • whole lot more.

  • The search for life is one of the big things that we're doing at NASA right now.

  • And it's really exciting.

  • And Webb is going to make, I think, really groundbreaking discoveries in exoplanet science.

  • One never knows.

  • We could get lucky.

  • Now, personally, do I hope we find signs of life with the Webb Telescope?

  • Yes, of course.

  • It would be awesome.

  • Really Webb is a multi-purpose observatory.

  • It will observe everything from the planets in our own solar system out to the most distant

  • objects we can see, and everything in-between.

  • And step one in building this, it turns out, starts with these.

  • If you've ever been with a bunch of engineering-type folks, when you sit in a meeting where you

  • want to talk about some kind of structure, people grab whatever's nearest to them.

  • I got a water bottle and I'm sticking it on top of my phone and, "Hey, here's a telescope,

  • and this..."

  • It's crazy.

  • So I just decided to build my own silly little model of JWST and brought it in and said,

  • "Look.

  • Instead of a cup and a phone, can we please just use this model?"

  • So how do we engineer THIS to see back in time?

  • Well, it has to see in infrared.

  • I’ll let Dr. Straughn explain.

  • So if you think about, for example, the Hubble Ultra Deep Field.

  • In this deepest image of the universe that we've ever had, we're able to see very very

  • distant galaxies, and if you pick out what the most distant ones are you'll

  • see that they're these little tiny red blips.

  • They're so far away that the expansion of the universe has caused the light from those

  • galaxies to literally be stretched into longer wavelengths.

  • And longer wavelengths mean redder light.

  • That's why we built the James Webb Space Telescope to be sensitive to the infrared: so that it

  • can pick up where Hubble left off and really complete that very first picture to look at

  • the very first stars and very first galaxies. And Webb’s ability to see in infrared really

  • relies on 3 main things.

  • Its mirror, its sunshield, and its orbit.

  • Let’s start with the mirror.

  • It may not look big here, but that mirror is HUGE.

  • 6 and 1/2 meters in diameter to be precise.

  • The reason why it's so big is really because the very first stars and very first galaxies

  • that were ever formed, they're very far away and they're very dim.

  • We're trying to collect one photon approximately every second.

  • We're counting individual photons.

  • So we need to be able to collect all of that light.

  • Now, the reason the mirror is gold is that it reflects infrared, making it easier to

  • focus that distant light down to the instruments.

  • But there’s a problem, the sun also emits infrared.

  • Which brings us to the sunshield.

  • This part is also huge, about the size of a tennis court.

  • So part of the job of the sun shield is literally to block the light from the sun from reaching

  • the telescope and messing up all of the good work that it's going to do.

  • It allows the telescope to operate at a temperature that is about 30 degrees kelvin.

  • Room temperature is about 300-ish kelvin.

  • So we are going very, very cold.

  • And finally, the orbit.

  • The James Webb Space Telescope is going far.

  • Really far.

  • 1.5 million km away from earth, to a place called the second lagrange point, or L2.

  • So here's the sun.

  • You have the Earth here.

  • L2 is here.

  • When you go out to L2, you don't have the Earth and the sun filling half your sky.

  • That's why we can use the sun shield to kind of cover them up so that all Webb sees is

  • the dark of space and be able to do its mission.

  • So, we need to launch all of this enormous, sensitive equipment on a rocket into space,

  • over a million kilometers away.

  • Which complicates things further because rocket launches are basically well-controlled explosions.

  • In order to survive that explosion, it has to be designed to be very robust and strong.

  • That coupled with the fact that JWST is also fairly large means we have to design it very

  • carefully to fit inside the rocket, then deploy it.

  • It has to be right when we launch it.

  • We have to test everything to make sure that it works correctly once it's in space because

  • we can't go fix it.

  • That’s what makes this project so unique; they won’t get a second chanceunlike

  • Hubble, which was serviced by astronauts 5 separate times.

  • Webb has to be perfect on the first try, so understandably, that’s taken some time to

  • achieve.

  • The James Webb Space Telescope was first scheduled to be launched in 2007, and was budgeted at

  • 500 million dollars.

  • But as construction progressed and testing began, that launch date and budget have changed.

  • A lot.

  • This really is engineering at the extreme.

  • It's pushing the edge of what's possible.

  • As a scientist that's going to depend on this telescope for my future research, to hear

  • of another delay was sad, it was disappointing.

  • But that's the reason we test because we don't want these things to happen once we're in

  • space.

  • And that brings us to where we are today.

  • With construction mostly complete, all that’s left are the final testing stages leading

  • up to the launch.

  • The sun shield and the spacecraft element are currently undergoing thermal vacuum testing.

  • And then after that we'll undergo some more tests, and then we will ship the whole observatory

  • down to South America in French Guiana to prep it for launch.

  • Once the telescope launches and is on its way to L2, it will start to unfold in space.

  • The entire process will take about two to three weeks.

  • I don't expect any of us are going to be getting much sleep for that time.

  • The thing for me that is maybe the most scary is the deployment of sun-shield.

  • There are 100s of different individual sort of movable parts that have to happen during

  • that deployment.

  • Between it deploying and being fully tensioned up, the position requirement that it has to hold

  • on orbit in space is about this much.

  • My job is to make sure that this thing, through its manufacturing, through installation, through

  • all the testing, and whatever happens to it on orbit, that it holds to this much slop.

  • After the telescope is fully deployed there's still a few key things we have to do.

  • We're going to tweak the mirror in order to make it perfect.

  • And then we have science instruments, cameras, and spectrographs that we turn on one at a

  • time, and we bring those up to working order.

  • This whole process takes a few months after launch to get ready.

  • Only then, after testing, launch, and deployment, can we discover the mysteries of our beginnings.

  • So, how close are we to seeing the universe’s first light?

  • Well, JWST will be launching in spring of 2021.

  • So about the summer to fall of 2021 is when we'll start getting those very first pictures

  • back, first light.

  • Our current theories in astrophysics tell us that we should be able to see those first

  • galaxies with Webb.

  • Of course we don't know yet, we won't know until we look.

  • But if the theories are right, then I think we should see the very first galaxies something

  • like a couple years from now after Webb is launched and starts taking its first data.

  • Astronomy really gets to the heart of what it means to be human.

  • It's asking these big questions that humans have always asked, you know, "Where do we

  • come from?

  • How did we get here?

  • And are we alone?"

  • I think we'll answer questions that we haven't even thought to ask yet, and that is one of

  • the most exciting things about any big telescope like this.

  • We are creatures of curiosity and of wonder.

  • This is an expression of it, I think, the highest level that we can achieve.

  • For more episodes of how close are we make sure to check out this playlist, and let us

  • know in the comments what you want to see us investigate next!

  • Thanks for watching!

And liftoff of the Space Shuttle Discovery with the Hubble Space Telescope.

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我們離發射詹姆斯-韋伯太空望遠鏡還有多近? (How Close Are We to Launching the James Webb Space Telescope?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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