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Zero-gravity ballet: James Webb Space Telescope deploys sunshield and mirror

On Tuesday, engineers successfully finished deploying the James Webb Space Telescope's sunshield, seen here during testing in December 2020 at Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, Calif.
Chris Gunn
/
NASA
On Tuesday, engineers successfully finished deploying the James Webb Space Telescope's sunshield, seen here during testing in December 2020 at Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, Calif.

Updated January 5, 2022 at 2:38 PM ET

Mission operators cheered late Wednesday morning after NASA's James Webb Space Telescope successfully deployed its secondary mirror, one day after setting up its enormous sunshield without a hitch.

Team members in face masks clapped and fist-bumped each in the wake of the maneuver.

Webb project manager Bill Ochs called it "another banner day for JWST."

"You guys did a heck of a job," he told the team assembled at the Mission Operations Control at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

Officials were still celebrating the Tuesday deployment of the telescope's tennis-court-sized sunshield — a critical feature that will allow the floating space observatory to peer into the most distant reaches of the universe.

"It was a wonderful moment," Hillary Stock, a sunshield deployment specialist for Webb contractor Northrop Grumman, said in a briefing after the event. "There was a lot of joy, a lot of relief."

"The JWST team kicks butt," Webb project manager Bill Ochs said Tuesday after the milestone maneuver.

The $10 billion observatory, launched from a European spaceport in French Guiana on Christmas Day, is the most powerful telescope ever sent into space. It boasts a 21-foot mirror with roughly six times the light-gathering area of the Hubble Space Telescope. It's so big that it had to be folded up like origami in order to fit into the Ariane 5 rocket that carried it away from Earth.

The telescope has been carefully unfolding in zero gravity since then. It's a multi-step process, but unfurling and setting up the sunshield was considered the most complex part.

The sunshield plays a vital role for the telescope. It blocks solar radiation and helps keep the telescope ultra-cold — cold enough to pick up infrared light coming from the earliest galaxies to form after the Big Bang, too faint even for Hubble to see.

If anything went wrong during the sunshield's deployment, it could doom a telescope that had been in the works for decades, and which had already faced years of criticism for rising costs and long delays.

The relief was palpable just before noon Tuesday when the call came down that all five layers had been pulled fully taut.

"We are going to be bonded forever by what we experienced," Ochs said as he congratulated the team.

Several steps remain in the telescope's deployment process in the coming days, including the deploying of the telescope's primary mirror.

The telescope is en route to its job site, a spot roughly a million miles from Earth, where it will travel in a solar orbit held stable by the gravitational tug of both the Earth and the Sun. Once it's fully up and running, it will observe early stars and galaxies and search for "biosignatures" in the atmospheres of distant planets that could be friendly to life.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Joe Palca is a science correspondent for NPR. Since joining NPR in 1992, Palca has covered a range of science topics — everything from biomedical research to astronomy. He is currently focused on the eponymous series, "Joe's Big Idea." Stories in the series explore the minds and motivations of scientists and inventors. Palca is also the founder of NPR Scicommers – A science communication collective.
Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.
Amina Khan