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Thread: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

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    Netherlands Avalon Member ExomatrixTV's Avatar
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    Lightbulb Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    • Everything Discovered from Year 2 of JWST. From Closest to Farthest [4K]:

    It's already been two years of JWST operations. In this episode we accumulated all the major science results, all the amazing images and graphs, all the important discoveries and controversies. Enjoy the ULTIMATE GUIDE to the second year of James Webb.
    • 00:00 Intro
    • 01:29 Jupiter's Moons
    • 04:26 Uranus and its faintest rings
    • 05:58 Exoplanets
    • 06:24 TRAPPIST-1 system
    • 09:04 Exomoon around a brown dwarf
    • 11:01 Asteroid collisions
    • 12:15 Hycean world
    • 16:00 Methane on an exoplanet
    • 17:00 Exoplanet weather
    • 19:15 Water delivery to exoplanets
    • 20:33 Sand clouds on an exoplanet
    • 22:00 Rogue planets
    • 24:12 Key molecule for life
    • 25:53 Lobster nebula
    • 27:07 A very young star
    • 28:11 Horsehead nebula
    • 29:24 Binary young star
    • 30:40 Ring nebula
    • 31:52 Pillars of creation in 3D
    • 33:05 Crab nebula
    • 34:02 Cassiopea A
    • 34:49 Heart of the Milky Way
    • 36:02 Extragalactic
    • 36:19 Supernova 1987a
    • 37:51 Triangulum galaxy
    • 39:38 Spiral galaxies face on
    • 40:51 Whirlpool galaxy
    • 42:21 El Gordo and gravitational lenses
    • 43:45 Erindel
    • 45:08 Cosmic web
    • 46:19 Most distant active black hole
    • 48:16 Most distant galaxy
    • 49:25 Epoch of Re-ionization
    • 51:24 What's next
    No need to follow anyone, only consider broadening (y)our horizon of possibilities ...

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  3. Link to Post #342
    Netherlands Avalon Member ExomatrixTV's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    • 8 BRAND NEW JWST Discoveries in 8 Minutes:

    JWST is always making amazing discoveries, and in this video we'll cover a massive 8 of the recent images and studies that the telescope has been doing. Each is pretty amazing in its own way. They range from deep field images that teach us about the early universe, to studies of nearby exoplanets.
    No need to follow anyone, only consider broadening (y)our horizon of possibilities ...

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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    A good description of the whole program, from the man in command throughout.

    😎Edit.. am still watching. Not quite halfway yet, of L/T/D/? = 1:03:33. Engineering nerd stuff done, now it’s into discoveries and science plays and plans. Back to it now, see ya’s later. 🐝

    How the James Webb Space Telescope was designed - with Mark Clampin

    The Royal Institution

    1.59M subscribers

    8,116 views Nov 12, 2024

    “NASA’s Astrophysics Division Director Mark Clampin shares his experiences designing the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), and what the future of astrophysics has in store.

    Watch the Q&A here (exclusively for our Science Supporters): • Q&A: How the James Webb Space Telesco...
    Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe

    This lecture was recorded at the Ri on the 19 October 2024.

    Join this channel to get access to perks including early, ad-free access to all our videos: / @theroyalinstitution

    ---

    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has now been capturing glimpses of our Universe for three and a half years. But as the largest telescope in space, the design and development of JWST was no small feat.

    Join Astrophysics Division Director at NASA Mark Clampin as he discusses his own experiences in the design of the JWST, and how these design elements led to some of the ground-breaking science results it has yielded from observations of the early universe, the formation and evolution of stars, and the study of exoplanet atmospheres.

    Looking to the future, Mark gives us a glimpse into two of NASA’s upcoming projects observing our universe. NASA’s next astrophysics flagship, the Roman Space Telescope, will study the nature of dark energy and the Habitable Worlds Observatory, a new mission concept that will propel forwards the search for life in the universe, while building on the technical achievements of the Roman and Webb telescopes.
    --

    Mark Clampin is the Astrophysics Division Director in the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. He previously served as the Director of the Sciences and Exploration Directorate (SED) at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) where he led the Astrophysics, Solar System, Heliophysics, Earth Science Divisions, and the high performance computing office. During his tenure at GSFC he was the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Observatory Project Scientist developing scientific requirements and overseeing their implementation. His research interests focus on studying the formation and evolution of planetary systems and astronomical instrumentation. He has designed space and ground-based telescope instruments including adaptive optics systems, coronagraphs and detectors. He is the recipient of the Meritorious Presidential Rank Award, NASA’s Exceptional Achievement, and Scientific Achievement Medals. He’s also a Fellow of SPIE and the Royal Astronomical Society. Until recently he was the Chief Editor of SPIE peer-reviewed Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments and Systems, a position he held from the creation of the Journal.

    ---

    00:00 Intro to the JWST and Mark
    05:11 Origins in the Hubble Telescope
    11:59 The design process for the JWST
    16:36 The mirrors on the JWST
    24:50 Testing, moving and logistics
    32:18 What happened in the six months after launch?
    37:35 The incredible image quality from JWST
    43:16 How the JWST is changing science
    51:16 What’s next for the JWST?”

    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 13th November 2024 at 10:40.

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    United States Avalon Member Bluegreen's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    Sombrero Galaxy Dazzles in New Webb Images and Video





    A new mid-infrared image from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope features the Sombrero galaxy, also known as Messier 104 (M104). The signature, glowing core seen in visible-light images does not shine, and instead a smooth inner disk is revealed.

    ZoomVideo: Sombrero Galaxy

    (1:30)

    The sharp resolution of Webb's MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) also brings into focus details of the galaxy's outer ring, providing insights into how the dust, an essential building block for astronomical objects in the universe, is distributed. The galaxy's outer ring shows intricate clumps in the infrared for the first time.

    The Sombrero galaxy is around 30 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Virgo.

    Stunning images like this, and an array of discoveries in the study of exoplanets, galaxies through time, star formation, and our own solar system, are still just the beginning. Recently, scientists from all over the world converged—virtually—to apply for observation time with Webb during its fourth year of science operations, which begins in July 2025.

    Published 25th November 2024 by Bethany Downer and Ninja Menning – Phys.org
    https://phys.org/news/2024-11-sombre...bb-images.html

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  9. Link to Post #345
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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    https://x.com/AstroDailyPod/status/1884021976064258485



    James Webb Validates Hubble’s Calculation of the Universe’s Expansion


    Through the lens of the Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes, scientists are zeroing in on the Hubble Constant, a vital measure that indicates the universe’s expansion rate.

    Recent studies, especially those involving the JWST, have provided more precise measurements, crucial for understanding the universe’s broader properties.

    Understanding the Hubble Constant

    In recent years, we’ve witnessed incredible advancements in our understanding of the universe, thanks to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and its successor, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Both telescopes have revolutionized astronomy, uncovering stunning discoveries. Among their shared focus has been refining the Hubble Constant, a key measurement that links the speed at which distant galaxies are moving away with their distances. A recent study confirms that JWST has validated earlier findings from HST, providing more precision in this critical measurement.

    The Hubble Constant (H0) is a cornerstone of cosmology, describing the rate at which the universe is expanding. It establishes the relationship between Earth and distant galaxies based on their recession speed. First introduced by Edwin Hubble in 1929, this constant is expressed in kilometers per second per megaparsec (km/s/Mpc), indicating how fast galaxies move away for every megaparsec of distance. Over the decades, determining its exact value has sparked intense scientific debate. Both HST and JWST have been instrumental in efforts to refine H0, as its accurate measurement is essential for understanding the universe’s age, size, and ultimate fate.

    Advances in Measuring the Universe’s Expansion

    A paper recently published by a team of researchers led by Adam G. Riess from Johns Hopkins University validated the results from a previous HST study. They use JWST to explore its earlier results of the cepheid/supernova distance ladder. This has been used to establish distances across the cosmos using Cepheid variable stars and Type 1a supernovae. Both objects can be likened to ‘standard candles’ whose actual brightness is very well understood. By measuring their apparent brightness from Earth, their distances can be calculated by comparing it to their actual brightness, their intrinsic luminosity.


    Resolving the Hubble Tension

    Over recent decades, a number of attempts have been made to accurately determine H0 using a multitude of different instruments and observations. The cosmic microwave background has been used along with the aforementioned studies using cepheid variables and supernovae events. The results provide a range of results which has become known as ‘Hubble tension.’ The recent study using JWST hopes that it may be able to fine-tune and validate previous work.

    Techniques and Challenges in Determining H0

    To be able to determine H0 with a level of accuracy using the cepheid/supernova ladder, a sufficiently high sample of cepheids and supernovae must be observed. This has been challenging, in particular of the sample size of supernovae within the range of Cepheid variable stars. The team also explored other techniques for determining H0 for example studying data from HST of the study of the luminosity of the brightest red giant branch stars in a galaxy – which can also work as a standard candle. Or the luminosity of certain carbon-rich stars which is another technique.

    Conclusion and Future Directions

    The team concludes that, when all JWST measurements are combined, including a correction for the low sample of supernovae data, that H0 comes out at 72.6 ± 2.0 km/s/Mpc This compares to the combined HST data which determines H0 as 72.8 km/s/Mpc It will take more years and more studies for the sample size of supernova from JWST to equal that from HST but the cross-check has so far revealed we are finally honing in on an accurate value for Hubble’s Constant.

    Adapted from an article originally published on Universe Today.
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    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    https://x.com/AstroDailyPod/status/1884442700126081530




    Supermassive black holes in 'little red dot' galaxies are 1,000 times larger than they should be, and astronomers don't know why

    Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have discovered distant, overly massive supermassive black holes in the early universe. The black holes seem way too massive compared to the mass of the stars in the galaxies that host them.

    In the modern universe, for galaxies close to our own Milky Way, supermassive black holes tend to have masses equal to around 0.01% of the stellar mass of their host galaxy. Thus, for every 10,000 solar masses attributed to stars in a galaxy, there is around one solar mass of a central supermassive black hole.

    In the new study, researchers statistically calculated that supermassive black holes in some of the early galaxies seen by JWST have masses of 10% of their galaxies' stellar mass. That means for every 10,000 solar masses in stars in each of these galaxies, there are 1,000 solar masses of a supermassive black hole.


    James Webb Space Telescope's infrared views will be a 'powerful time machine'

    The James Webb Space Telescope will peer back to the early universe in unprecedented detail. Credit: ESA
    "The mass of these supermassive black holes is very high compared to the stellar mass of the galaxies that host them," team leader Jorryt Matthee, a scientist at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), told Space.com. "At face value, our measurements imply that the supermassive black hole mass is 10% of the stellar mass in the galaxies we studied."

    "In the most extreme scenario, this would imply that the black holes are 1,000 times too heavy."

    The discovery could bring astronomers a step closer to solving the mystery of how supermassive black holes with masses millions or even billions of times that of the sun grew so quickly in the early universe.

    "Rather than saying this discovery is 'troubling,' I would say it is 'promising,' as the large discrepancy suggests that we are about to learn something new," Matthee added.

    The story begins with little red dots

    Since JWST started beaming data back to Earth in the summer of 2022, the $10 billion telescope has helped astronomers refine their understanding of the early cosmos.

    This has included the discovery of supermassive black holes with millions of solar masses when the universe was less than one billion years old. This is problematic, because scientists have estimated that the merger chains of progressively larger black holes and the voracious feeding on surrounding matter that leads black holes to supermassive sizes are thought to take more than a billion years.

    Another significant aspect of this investigation of the early universe by JWST has been the discovery of "little red dot galaxies," some of which existed just 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang, when the universe was around 11% of its current age.

    The red coloration of these surprisingly bright early galaxies is thought to come from gas and dust in a flattened cloud of matter around supermassive black holes called an accretion disk. As the giant black holes feed on this matter, they emit huge amounts of electromagnetic energy, from a compact region known as an active galactic nucleus (AGN).

    "In 2023 and 2024, we and other groups discovered a previously hidden population of AGNs in the early universe in the first data sets from the JWST," Matthee said. "The light that we see from these objects, in particular the redder light, originates from accretion disks around supermassive black holes.

    "These objects became known as 'little red dots' because that's how they appear in JWST images."

    Currently, this early galactic population is very exciting, albeit poorly understood. For instance, in the early universe, little red dots seem to be far more numerous compared to previously known populations of AGNs seen from Earth as supermassive black hole-powered quasars.

    "The little red dots also show some very remarkable properties, such as the faintness in X-ray emission, which is pretty unusual for AGNs, and the infrared emission is also unusual," Matthee said. "Due to these complications, we are struggling to interpret the light that we observe from the little red dots, which means that it is very difficult to study their properties."

    This is where Matthee and colleagues' new work comes in. Using a data set from the JWST year 2 (cycle 2) “All the Little Things (ALT)” survey, the team built a precise 3D map of all galaxies in a specific region in the sky.

    "Within that region, we have identified seven little red dots, similar to previous studies, but now we have been able to compare the locations of these little red dots in the 3D galaxy map," Matthee said.

    The team's little red dots are located so far away that their light has been traveling to us for around 12.5 billion years. They are clustered in the so-called cosmic web of galaxies, with their positioning being of paramount importance.

    Little red dot galaxies are morsels on a cosmic web

    The position of galaxies in the cosmic web depends on the type of galaxy. More evolved, massive galaxies are found in over-dense regions such as the nodes where the strands of the web connect. Younger and lower-mass galaxies tend to be found in less dense regions of the cosmic web, along the length of individual strands away from nodes.

    "We have found that the little red dots are in environments that resemble low-mass, young galaxies," Matthee said. "This implies that the little red dot galaxies are also low-mass young galaxies."

    The fact these little red dot galaxies contain AGNs has provided evidence that early black holes are actively growing in galaxies with stellar masses as low as around 100 million times that of the sun.

    One possible explanation for this is that supermassive black holes in the early universe managed to form and grow much more efficiently than those in the present-day universe. This could be due to the more rapid consumption of surrounding gas and matter.

    "In my opinion, the most likely explanation is the extremely rapid growth of supermassive black holes nurtured by the high gas densities of galaxies in the early universe," Matthee said. "These densities simultaneously lead to high stellar densities, which promotes supermassive black hole formation through facilitating runaway collisions of remnant black holes."

    If that's true, then the formation of stars and supermassive black holes in galaxies are intrinsically linked, with these processes depending on each other. Though supermassive black holes grow faster in early galaxies, star formation catches up, leading to the 1:100 mass ratio seen today.

    This doesn't yet confirm rapid growth theories over other supermassive black hole growth explanations, such as the idea that these cosmic titans grow from massive black hole seeds created by the direct collapse of huge clouds of gas and dust.

    However, Matthee added that it will now be hard for theorists to get around low host galaxy masses when competing theories are considered.

    Matthee explained that the next steps for both the team and for the wider astronomical community are to eliminate the possibility that the stellar mass/black hole mass ratio they found is not the result of inaccurate measurements or a selection bias that may have favored the most active and thus massive supermassive black holes.

    This will likely involve the discovery of more little red dot galaxies, a hunt that the JWST will undoubtedly be at the heart of.

    "The JWST has been important for two main reasons: Without it, we would not have discovered those populations of faint AGNs," Matthee concluded. "Also, without the JWST, we would not have been able to make the accurate 3D map of galaxy distributions that we used to infer the properties of the galaxies hosting the faint AGNs.

    "It’s a very exciting research field at the moment!"

    The team's research has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal. It has been posted on the paper repository site arXiv.
    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    No need to follow anyone, only consider broadening (y)our horizon of possibilities ...

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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    • JWST’s Most Troubling Discovery Yet: Crisis at Cosmic Dawn:
    No need to follow anyone, only consider broadening (y)our horizon of possibilities ...

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    Default Re: The Power Of The James Webb Telescope in Space To Be Launched in 2021

    First Exoplanet Discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope

    NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope keeps breaking records. Now another with the discovery of its first new exoplanet.





    The research, published in Nature, focuses on a special type of star system which scientists identified as promising for imaging exoplanets. These are young star systems that are “pole on”, meaning the stellar disc which includes planets is face on, rather than viewed from the side.

    A key advantage of targeting young systems is that recently formed planets in these discs are still hot, making them brighter than those in older systems.

    TWA 7 is a young star less than half the size of our Sun and 111 light-years from Earth, sitting in the constellation Antila. At just 6.5 million years old, the star is in the very early stages of its life. Astronomers noticed a debris disc around the star when it was discovered in 1999. Since then, they have wondered if the star could be host to forming planets.

    It ticks all the boxes to be targeted in the search for a new exoplanet.

    The star’s debris disc has 3 rings – one of which is quite narrow. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) images – taken using a coronagraph attachment on the telescope’s MIRI instrument – revealed a source within the rings which looked a little bit like a planet.

    The astronomers eliminated other possibilities including observation bias and concluded that the source must be a planet. Computer simulations confirmed that the ring and gap where the planet is believed to sit corresponds to the JWST images.

    The planet, dubbed TWA 7 b, is about the same mass as Saturn – roughly 30% the mass of Jupiter, or nearly 100 times the mass of Earth. This makes it the lightest exoplanet ever directly imaged.

    Published 26th June 2025 by Evrim Yazgin – Cosmos Magazine
    https://cosmosmagazine.com/space/ast...rst-exoplanet/
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09150-4

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