James Webb Telescope

8,360 Views | 44 Replies | Last: 7 mo ago by desope24
metcalfmafia
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I'm both deeply fascinated by space, but also terrified depending on the day.

Something about it gives me anxiety.
Oldsouljer
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metcalfmafia said:

I'm both deeply fascinated by space, but also terrified depending on the day.

Something about it gives me anxiety.
You saying that you don't have "the right stuff"? ;B
metcalfmafia
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Oldsouljer said:

metcalfmafia said:

I'm both deeply fascinated by space, but also terrified depending on the day.

Something about it gives me anxiety.
You saying that you don't have "the right stuff"? ;B
The devil's lettuce tends to help brother.
Civilized
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metcalfmafia said:

Oldsouljer said:

metcalfmafia said:

I'm both deeply fascinated by space, but also terrified depending on the day.

Something about it gives me anxiety.
You saying that you don't have "the right stuff"? ;B
The devil's lettuce tends to help brother.

The vastness of space and the time parameters involved does it for me.

It brings into focus what a tiny speck we are in the continuum of existence.

Fascinating but brain-melting stuff.

Wolfer79
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You've seen the first full-color images from the James Webb Space Telescope. So, what's next for the #JWST? @NCStateSciences' Rongmon Bordoloi explains what the telescope will help us learn and how he and his students will play a role. #UnfoldTheUniverse #ThinkAndDo https://t.co/vIANUyGuJd
desope24
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Check out this image. This is crazy. The spikes/flares are just artifacts from the telescope itself, but the rings are real. They're concentric waves of gas coming off of a binary star system. Whenever the two stars come close to each other, a burst of gas is ripped off one of the stars and emitted into space. So it happens over and over as they orbit each other.

desope24
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There's also this - the first direct image of another planet by JWST. This one is about 400' light years away and is about 7x the mass of Jupiter. The photo shows the planet in different wavelengths with the star blocked out.

desope24
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Cool picture of Uranus. Plus it's never not funny to talk about "the rings around Uranus".

https://www.space.com/uranus-rings-james-webb-space-telescope-holiday-photo

Oldsouljer
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dogplasma said:

There's also this - the first direct image of another planet by JWST. This one is about 400' light years away and is about 7x the mass of Jupiter. The photo shows the planet in different wavelengths with the star blocked out.


This is a particularly fascinating for several reasons. Do they know what kind of star it is? If it's below F class, could be old enough to allow evolution of life on a habitable world. A world 7x Jupiter's mass could very easily have exo-moons the size of earth with possible atmospheres supporting life. Or if it's out beyond the "frost line" distance from its star, perhaps an earth-like rocky planet exists in the habitable zone, protected from frequent asteroid impacts by the super-Jupiter much as Jupiter is postulated to protect the Earth via its massive gravitational field.
desope24
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https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cjeenyw8rd2o.amp

The James Webb Space Telescope has smashed its own record for detecting the most distant known galaxy.

Called JADES-GS-z14-0, the collection of stars was spied as it was a mere 290 million years after the Big Bang.

Put another way - if the Universe is 13.8 billion years old, it means we're observing the galaxy when the cosmos was only 2% of its current age.


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