At Last, First Light for the James Webb Space Telescope Nears

The most ambitious space instrument ever will let us see back almost to the big bang


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Image of the James Webb Space Telescope.
Photo: Chris Gunn/NASA
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For a deep dive into the engineering behind the James Webb Space Telescope, see our collection of posts here.

Back in 1990, after significant cost overruns and delays, the Hubble Space Telescope was finally carried into orbit aboard the space shuttle. Astronomers rejoiced, but within a few weeks, elation turned to dread. Hubble wasn't able to achieve anything like the results anticipated, because, simply put, its 2.4-meter mirror was made in the wrong shape.

For a time, it appeared that the US $5 billion spent on the project had been a colossal waste. Then NASA came up with a plan: Astronauts would compensate for ­Hubble's distorted main mirror by adding small secondary mirrors shaped in just the right way to correct the flaw. Three years later, that fix was carried out, and Hubble's mission to probe some of the faintest objects in the sky was saved.

Fast-forward three decades. Later this year, the James Webb Space Telescope is slated to be launched. Like Hubble, the Webb telescope project has been plagued by cost overruns and delays. At the turn of the millennium, the cost was thought to be $1 billion. But the final bill will likely be close to $10 billion.

Unlike Hubble, the Webb telescope won't be orbiting Earth. Instead, it will be sent to the Earth-Sun L2 Lagrange point, which is about 1.5 million kilometers away in the opposite direction from the sun. This point is cloaked in semidarkness, with Earth shadowing much of the sun. Such positioning is good for observing, but bad for solar powering. So the telescope will circle around L2 instead of positioning itself there.

The downside will be that the telescope will be too distant to service, at least with any kind of spacecraft available now. “Webb's peril is that it will be parked in space at a place that we can't get back to if something goes wrong," says Eric Chaisson, an astrophysicist at Harvard who was a senior scientist at Johns Hopkins Space Telescope Science Institute when Hubble was commissioned. “Given its complexity, it's hard to believe something won't, though we can all hope, as I do, that all goes right."

Why then send the Webb telescope so far away?

The answer is that the Webb telescope is intended to gather images of stars and galaxies created soon after the big bang. And to look back that far in time, the telescope must view objects that are very distant. These objects will be extremely faint, sure. More important, the visible light they gave off will be shifted into the infrared.

For this reason, the telescope's detectors are sensitive to comparatively long infrared wavelengths. And those detectors would be blinded if the body of the telescope itself was giving off a lot of radiation at these wavelengths due to its heat. To avoid that, the telescope will be kept far from the sun at L2 and will be shaded by a tennis-court-size sun shield composed of five layers of aluminum- and silicon-coated DuPont Kapton. This shielding will keep the mirror of the telescope at a chilly 40 to 50 kelvins, considerably colder than Hubble's mirror, which is kept essentially at room temperature.

Clearly, for the Webb telescope to succeed, everything about the mission has to go right. Gaining confidence in that outcome has taken longer than anyone involved in the project had envisioned. A particularly troubling episode occurred in 2018, when a shake test of the sun shield jostled some screws loose. That and other problems, attributed to human error, shook legislators' confidence in the prime contractor, Northrop Grumman. The government convened an independent review board, which uncovered fundamental issues with how the project was being managed.

In 2018 testimony to the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, Wesley Bush, then the CEO of Northrop Grumman, came under fire when the chairman of the committee, Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), asked him whether Northrop Grumman would agree to pay for $800 million of unexpected expenditures beyond the nominal final spending limit.

Naturally, Bush demurred. He also marshalled an argument that has been used to justify large expenditures on space missions since Sputnik: the need to demonstrate technological prowess. “It is especially important that we take on programs like Webb to demonstrate to the world that we can lead," said Bush.

During the thoroughgoing reevaluation in 2018, launch was postponed to March of 2021. Then the pandemic hit, delaying work up and down the line. In July of 2020, launch was postponed yet again, to 31 October 2021.

Whether Northrop Grumman will really hit that target is anyone's guess: The company did not respond to requests from IEEE Spectrum for information about how the pandemic is affecting the project timeline. But if this massive, quarter-century-long undertaking finally makes it into space this year, astronomers will no doubt be elated. Let's just hope that elation over a space telescope doesn't again turn into dread.

This article appears in the January 2021 print issue as “Where No One Has Seen Before."

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