Article 62V6R James Webb telescope gives a stunning look at galaxies far, far away

James Webb telescope gives a stunning look at galaxies far, far away

by
Archie Bland
from Science | The Guardian on (#62V6R)

What the telescope's incredible images show about how it operates - and the universe itself

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On Christmas Day last year, 30 years after its conception, the James Webb space telescope launched from French Guiana. On 28 December, it went past the moon. On 24 January, it fired its thrusters for five minutes and settled into its final orbit about 1,500,000 km from Earth. On 12 July, after months of painstaking setup, it produced its first image - showing us, for the first time, faraway galaxies as they were more than 13bn years ago.

The Webb telescope has been adding to this miraculous beginning ever since. Now it's brought us something a little closer to home, a mere 615 million km away: the most extraordinarily detailed images of Jupiter we've ever seen.

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