Astronomers and space fans around the world can breathe a sigh of relief: The James Webb Space Telescope is now fully deployed.
The $10 billion NASA observatory unfolded the second “wing” of its massive primary mirror today (Jan. 8), bringing the light-collecting structure up to its full size and marking the end of the mission’s long, risky and ultra-complex deployment phase.Â
As the final mirror segment folded in place just before 10:30 a.m. EST (1530 GMT), Webb space telescope controllers traded high-fives and applauded in celebration. It will take about two hours to lock the mirror segment in place, NASA officials said.
“What an amazing milestone,” Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for science, said from Switzerland during a live webcast. “We see that beautiful pattern out there in the sky now, almost complete … I’m just so amazed and in awe about this.”
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After Webb launched into space on Dec. 25, the normally clean-shaven Zurbuchen pledged not to shave until its hair-raising deployment was complete.Â
“I fully expect to shave today,” Zurbuchen said.Â
The mission team, for their part, seemed to ease the tension of today’s final deployment by piping music in to their mission operations center in the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. Among their music selections was “Ring My Bell” by Anita Ward.
“I just feel this kind of glow, you know, in my chest right now just seeing that mirror deployed all together,” said NASA astrophysicist Michelle Thaller, who hosted the agency’s live Webb mirror deployment webcast. The mirror’s size will give Webb and humanity “a chance to see the universe as it was perhaps only 100 million years after the start of the Big Bang.”
Webb launched on Christmas Day on a mission to peer at the universe’s first stars and galaxies, sniff the air of nearby alien planets for intriguing chemicals and perform a wide variety of other high-profile tasks. But getting the observatory up to speed takes some serious doing.
Webb is optimized to view the cosmos in infrared light, wavelengths that we feel as heat. The telescope’s optics and instruments must be kept extremely cold to pick up these faint heat signatures, so Webb sports a five-layer sunshield the size of a tennis court to reflect and radiate away solar energy.
The fully extended sunshield is far too big to fit in the protective payload fairing of any currently operational rocket, so the structure launched in a highly compact configuration. So did Webb’s 21.3-foot-wide (6.5 meters) primary mirror, which consists of 18 gold-plated hexagonal segments arrayed across a central post and two side wings.
Webb’s deployment phase was therefore incredibly involved.Â
“The Webb observatory has 50 major deployments … and 178 release mechanisms to deploy those 50 parts,” Webb Mission Systems Engineer Mike Menzel, of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said in an explainer video called “29 Days on the Edge” that the agency posted in October.Â
“Every single one of them must work,” Menzel said. “Unfolding Webb is hands-down the most complicated spacecraft activity we’ve ever done.”Â
On Saturday, mission engineers could breathe a sigh of relief.Â
“178 of 178. Congratulations,” Webb’s mission operations manager told the team after the mirror deployed, marking the last of those non-redundant release mechanism tasks.
The sunshield structure alone has 140 release mechanisms, 70 hinge assemblies, 400 pulleys, 90 cables and eight deployment motors, mission team members have said. All of them worked perfectly during sunshield extension, which began three days after launch and took about a week.
Webb’s mirror deployment was a multistep process as well. On Wednesday (Jan. 5), the mission team locked into place the observatory’s 2.4-foot-wide (0.74 m) secondary mirror, the second surface that deep-space photons will hit on their way to Webb’s four scientific instruments.Â
The port, or left-hand, wing of the primary mirror was deployed on Friday (Jan. 7). The starboard wing followed suit today.
All of these deployment steps have taken place while Webb cruises toward its final destination, a gravitationally stable spot about 930,000 miles (1.5 million kilometers) from our planet called the Earth-sun Lagrange Point 2 (L2). At L2, Webb can stay aligned with the sun, Earth and moon, allowing its sunshield to continuously block the light and heat coming off those bodies.
About 29 days after launch — so, on or around Jan. 23 — Webb will perform an engine burn that puts it into orbit around L2. But the telescope won’t be ready to start observing yet.
The mission team will still have to check out and calibrate Webb’s four scientific instruments and precisely align the segments of the primary mirror so it acts a single, nearly perfect light-collecting surface. This work is expected to take five months or so.Â
If all goes according to plan, Webb — a joint effort of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency — will begin its highly anticipated science mission in late June or early July and keep observing the cosmos for at least five years.
Mike Wall is the author of “Out There” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or on Facebook.Â