-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueThe Path Ahead
What are you paying the most attention to as we enter 2025? Find out what we learned when we asked that question. Join us as we explore five main themes in the new year.
Soldering Technologies
Soldering is the heartbeat of assembly, and new developments are taking place to match the rest of the innovation in electronics. There are tried-and-true technologies for soldering. But new challenges in packaging, materials, and sustainability may be putting this key step in flux.
The Rise of Data
Analytics is a given in this industry, but the threshold is changing. If you think you're too small to invest in analytics, you may need to reconsider. So how do you do analytics better? What are the new tools, and how do you get started?
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
James Webb Space Telescope en Route to Discover Origins of the Universe, Study Exoplanets
January 6, 2022 | ThalesEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
The impressive James Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful telescope of this kind ever made, was successfully launched by Arianespace on December 25, 2021. A joint program between NASA and its counterparts in Europe (ESA) and Canada (CSA), Webb will observe the beginnings of our Universe by reaching back in time to just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. It will also observe exoplanets – planets outside the Solar System – that are comparable to our own, as well as the formation and evolution of stars and galaxies. The ultimate aim of this successor to the iconic Hubble space telescope is to discover galaxies that reach back to the relative beginnings of the Universe. This state-of-the-art time machine is expected to revolutionize all aspects of modern astronomy. It will unveil the hidden side of the Universe, namely stars enveloped in clouds of dust, molecules in the atmosphere of other worlds, and the light issuing from the first stars and galaxies.
Webb stands out!
The key to Webb’s outstanding capabilities is its huge primary mirror, made of 18 hexagonal segments and stretching 6.5 meters (21 feet) in diameter. The mirror is 100 times more sensitive that Hubble, with the ability to detect the extremely faint light emanating from distant stars and galaxies. Webb is fitted with four main instruments, imagers and spectrometers.
Both instruments and mirror are protected by a huge heat shield, comprising five ultra-thin layers. It will enable the observatory to resist extreme temperature fluctuations, ranging from +110°C to -235°C.
The satellite is now en route towards its final orbital position at the second Lagrange point (L2), about a million and a half kilometers from Earth. Unlike Hubble, which orbits the Earth, James Webb will orbit around the Sun. It will stay in constant alignment with both Sun and Earth, “behind” the latter. Furthermore, the mirror will always have its “back” to our planet.
The James Webb Space Telescope weighed 6.2 metric tons at launch and offers a design life of ten years.
Mission summary
The Webb telescope will gather light in a slightly different part of the spectrum than its older brother. While Hubble observes the Universe in bandwidths from ultraviolet to near infrared, Webb will cover the spectrum from visible to medium infrared. This means the new space telescope will be able to study the infrared light emitted by the first stars and galaxies, as well as other planetary systems.
Webb will observe all phases in cosmic history, looking for the first stars and galaxies to be formed, as well as all forms of life, while also studying the evolution of galaxies and how current stars and planets came to be.
Thales Alenia Space’s role on James Webb
A transponder made in Italy to communicate across deep space
Program prime contractor Northrop Grumman chose Thales Alenia Space in Italy to build the transponder enabling the spacecraft to communicate from deep space. This device drew on the company’s long experience with making long-range transponders for a variety of deep space missions, starting with Cassini/Huygens, then Mars Express, Venus Express, Rosetta, Lisa Pathfinder, Gaia and now the BepiColombo mission on its way to Mercury.
MIRI electronics, made in Belgium
Thales Alenia Space in Belgium supplied the integrated control electronics (ICE) for the optical module on MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument), a collaboration between Europe and the United States. MIRI comprises two main parts: spectrometers and the MIRIM imager module.
Suggested Items
TopLine’s Martin Hart to Present at Microelectronics Reliability and Qualification Workshop (MRQW)
01/16/2025 | TopLine CorporationTopLine Corporation’s Founder and CEO Martin Hart has been invited to deliver a presentation on the topic of how “Braided Solder Columns reduce mechanical stress in large heterogeneous 2.5D advanced packages for space and commercial applications” at The Aerospace Corporation’s Microelectronics Reliability and Qualification Workshop (MRQW) in Los Angeles (El Segundo), California on February 12, 2025.
Merlin Circuit Technology Achieves Prestigious JOSCAR Accreditation
01/14/2025 | Merlin Circuit TechnologyMerlin Circuit Technology is proud to announce it has been awarded the coveted Joint Approvals Group for Industry (JAG) Standard 001 (JOSCAR) accreditation.
FTG Aerospace Tianjin Approved as an AMO by CAAC
01/08/2025 | Globe NewswireFiran Technology Group Corporation, a leading provider of electronic products and avionic sub-systems for the aerospace and defense markets, has received approval from Civil Aviation Administration of China to be an Approved Maintenance Organization (AMO).
GKN Aerospace Officially Opens $55 Million Repair Facility for Aero-Engine Components in San Diego
01/02/2025 | GKN AerospaceGKN Aerospace has opened a new 150,000 square-foot facility in San Diego, California, strengthening the company’s global repair network and commitment to sustainable, cutting-edge MRO solutions.
IPC Announces New Training Course: PCB Design for Military & Aerospace Applications
12/23/2024 | IPCIPC announced the launch of a new training course: PCB Design for Military & Aerospace Applications.