JWST: Profile of a Master Telescope

In many walks of life a single concerted effort to achieve the impossible will usually encounter opposition on all sides, however it appears that this reality is little diminished when it comes to astronomy. So for the largest space telescope in history to get off the ground and become that next-generation space-cruising observational paragon that it is said it will be, its engineers and designers have needed no less than three decades to overcome a host of technological, financial, and operational handicaps each of which, left unresolved, would have threatened to bring the entire project to a standstill.

 

ISIM: Hidden behind the golden mirror will be the powerful NIRCam or Near InfraRed Camera comprising two modules with coronagraphic capabilities to record the spectra of light from distant objects, NIRSpec or Near InfraRed Spectrograph, MIRI or Mid-InfraRed Instrument whose jurisdiction will span from 5-27 micrometres, and the FGS or Fine Guidance Sensor along with NIRISS/Near InfraRed Imager and Slitless Spectrograph which will be able to capture astronomical images and undertake spectroscopy in the wavelength 0.8-5 micrometres.   Credit: NASA

ISIM: Hidden behind the golden mirror will be the powerful NIRCam or Near InfraRed Camera comprising two modules with coronagraphic capabilities to record the spectra of light from distant objects, NIRSpec or Near InfraRed Spectrograph, MIRI or Mid-InfraRed Instrument whose jurisdiction will span from 5-27 micrometres, and the FGS or Fine Guidance Sensor along with NIRISS/Near InfraRed Imager and Slitless Spectrograph which will be able to capture astronomical images and undertake spectroscopy in the wavelength 0.8-5 micrometres.
(image credit: NASA)

 

The first challenge to JWST gaining its òÀÜimpossibleòÀÝ cosmic eyesight has been to do with heat. A telescope that is trying to see farther into space than ever before and that attempts to achieve this by òÀÜlookingòÀÝ at the Universe in its infrared ensemble needs to be kept cold, down at the coldest temperatures possible in fact, otherwise its ultra-sensitive heat sensors and imaging equipment will produce corrupted infrared images where the sensors have been òÀÜdistractedòÀÝ by detecting themselves and the telescopeòÀÙs other working components instead of the heat signature of a very distant galaxy! To avoid any $9 billion imaging catastrophes two major things are required, on the one hand a cooling system that can cool critical parts of the observatory down and maintain them at around -266 degrees Celsius, and on the other a totally unique telescope design. The James Webb Space Telescope is therefore being equipped with a two-stage cryocooler to guarantee the most sensitive infrared sensors ever made are not adversely affected by the observatoryòÀÙs other heat-generating organs but instead, maintain their super-cool exterior.

 

3-part spacecraft: WebbòÀÙs three major components are the òÀØgiant eyeòÀÙ and all associated parts or the OTE (Optical Telescope Element), the transport vehicle for the eye or SE (Spacecraft Element), and the four main scientific instruments for interpreting what the eye sees contained in the Integrated Science Instrument Module. Credit: STScI

3-part spacecraft: WebbòÀÙs three major components are the òÀØgiant eyeòÀÙ and all associated parts or the OTE (Optical Telescope Element), the transport vehicle for the eye or SE (Spacecraft Element), and the four main scientific instruments for interpreting what the eye sees contained in the Integrated Science Instrument Module.
(image credit: STScI)

 

Apart from JWSTòÀÙs infrared sensors being protected òÀÜfrom themselvesòÀÝ however there are two other significant objects that the most sophisticated infra-red observatory in space will need shielded against, the heat of the nearest warm planet and heat from the nearest star, namely Earth and the Sun.

Optical telescopes such as Hubble are protected from unwanted òÀØwhiteòÀÙ light by being encased distinctively, inside a tube, however JWSTòÀÙs engineers have recognised that a flagship infrared telescope requires much more. The reason being that although a cylindrical shell would succeed in allowing infrared light into the telescope from one direction only, (ie. from the target object being imaged), the tube itself would heat up as infrared light from the Sun and Earth continues to shine on its exterior. In turn the cylinderòÀÙs interior would experience more and more infrared rays bouncing around erratically like laser beams inside a biscuit tin. Once again, while this activity would have little effect on equipment simultaneously producing images in visible (òÀØnon-heat-relatedòÀÙ) light, it would cause havoc in the readings of JWSTòÀÙs ultra-heat-sensitive infrared instruments.

WebbòÀÙs engineers have come to the conclusion therefore that the best way to lose this unwanted heat is to open the telescope back up, reminiscent a little in appearance perhaps of the large land-based radio telescopes back on Earth. Exposed to the frigid environment of space, any infrared rays in and around the space observatoryòÀÙs mirrors would quickly dissipate into the surrounding cold void. Having coming full circle then, we may wonder how as a tubeless telescope Webb will be protected from incidental heat radiation from the Sun and Earth, radiation that would otherwise be able to sweep across its field of view? The answer is a 27metre-squared bespoke sunshade behind which its telescopic instruments and mirrors will hide.

Credit: STScI

Image credit: STScI

Despite this monstrosityòÀÙs glistening reflective surface however no chances are being taken in terms of possible heat absorption and transfer through the material as no less than five sunshield membranes will open out one behind the other, rigorously separating JWST from those two unwelcome heat sources on the other side. The idea is that with five layers employed on the task any undeterred heat absorbed through the fabric and passing out the other side towards the telescope will have yet another barrier to contend with, and due to its reflective (anti-absorption) finish each shiny wall progressing closer to WebbòÀÙs infrared instruments should redirect any remaining heat waves out between the layers and away into space at harmless right angles to the telescope backplane.

 

A split personality telescope: Which will operate in part, at a temperature 28 degrees hotter than Death Valley, while at the same time for the other, from a dark, ultra-cold orbital recess. Credit: STScI

A split personality telescope: JWST will operate in part, at a temperature 28 degrees hotter than Death Valley, while at the same time the other side is in ultra-cold darkness.
Credit: STScI

 

Like its predecessor JWSTòÀÙS power-acquiring solar panel will be located òÀÜoutsideòÀÝ or rather on the other side of the Sunshield from the telescope itself, always facing the Sun and so maximising its intake of solar energy. Although a standard feature on all satellites, the solar panelòÀÙs importance cannot be underestimated, for without an effective and well-positioned one WebbòÀÙs batteries would die, along with its other systems, and it would lose the ability to carefully maintain its L2 orbital position and its orientation away from the Sun. It is thought that the solar wind would finally flip the entire observatory òÀØthe wrong way roundòÀÙ, the primary mirror would be destroyed in the SunòÀÙs relentless glare and yet another expensive and unresponsive piece of space junk would drift away lost to the great void beyond.

 

Sunshield testing: The James Webb Space Telescope mission badge with the tennis court sized silicon-doped and aluminium Kapton E sunshield in the background.  Credit: Composite: Northrup Grumman/NASA (logo)

Sunshield testing: The James Webb Space Telescope mission badge with the tennis court sized silicon-doped and aluminium Kapton E sunshield in the background.
(image credit: Composite: Northr0p Grumman/NASA (logo))

 

So just how hi-tech will this new telescope be compared to NASAòÀÙs current optical flagship, Hubble? Well while itòÀÙs almost impossible to explore every aspect of the flying observatory there is one particularly fine example that canòÀÙt be overlooked. WebbòÀÙs NIRSpec is to be being armed with yet another astronomically-ground-breaking technology, the microshutter device. If any astronomers have ever dreamed of some super-duper telescope that could accelerate the speed of cosmic discovery by studying lots of things in space at the same time, then incredibly their fantasy is about to become reality. Designed at NASA Goddard this four-postage-stamp-sized structure, like four tiny advent calendars but with a total of 62, 000 programmable doors can together select any patch of sky at a time and target up to 100 deep-space objects for study simultaneously. As we recognise that some of the best deep-space photos to date have required collective 50-day sittings, we can see how the ability to study more than one celestial object at a time will be great news for astronomers.

 

 

No beehive here: Rather JWSTòÀÙs bespoke mircoshutter array.  (Image credit: NASA)

No beehive here: Rather JWSTòÀÙs bespoke mircoshutter array.
(Image credit: NASA)

 

But after considering all of these hi-tech systems that are being put in place to provide a stable observational platform for the Webb telescope, what of the most important piece of all, the primary mirror itself? Well just as WebbòÀÙs huge Sunshield needs to be pleated and rolled up like the flexible fabric of an umbrella to fit inside the Ariane 5 rocketòÀÙs nose cone, so must the giant eye necessarily fold to less than 6.5m in diameter until it crosses the Karman line, hence the primary mirroròÀÙs assemble-in-space òÀØjigsawòÀÙ design. However, with its segmented honey-comb-like face how can NASA guarantee that once tessellated, all 18 of the individual mirrors will harmonise perfectly with one another to reflect a coherent and highly accurate image of the UniverseòÀÙs first galaxies? Part of the answer is in legs, lots of them. Each mirror segment, rather like 4ft-wide robotic insects have six legs enabling them to tilt and manoeuvre their flat shiny backs into multiple positions and adopt an angle that will best accommodate the other golden members of the primary mirroròÀÙs reflective orchestra.

: L2: With the Sun 100 times the Earth-JWST distance off picture to the left, a halo orbit maintained by Webb at the gravitationally-neutral second Lagrange Point will enable our planet to shield it from some of the SunòÀÙs image-disrupting-light, with the telescopeòÀÙs sunshield providing the necessary barrier against unwanted interference from the Earth and SunòÀÙs infrared radiation emissions.   Credit: NASA

L2: With the Sun 100 times the Earth-JWST distance off picture to the left, a halo orbit maintained by Webb at the gravitationally-neutral second Lagrange Point will enable our planet to shield it from some of the SunòÀÙs image-disrupting-light, with the telescopeòÀÙs sunshield providing the necessary barrier against unwanted interference from the Earth and SunòÀÙs infrared radiation emissions.
(image credit: NASA)

 

Impressive as this may all sound WebbòÀÙs engineers arenòÀÙt off the hook yet, for design of the telescope is not enough, the very materials the telescope is to be made from must also be analysed to see if they have the necessary properties to not only survive but perform effectively near absolute zero. The light weight material meeting this criterion is beryllium. With a rigidity four times greater than any composite and six times greater than other known metal or alloy, shiny beryllium is the metal from which all 20 of Webb mirrors (including the secondary and tertiary mirror elements) have already been machined. Yet despite its remarkable ability to survive the structure-warping massively cold temperatures of space without becoming brittle, not even a sheet of beryllium can encounter the lowest end of the thermodynamic scale without showing some distortion. Logically we might believe that in careful selection of WebbòÀÙs mirror fabric and in guaranteeing the best material known would be used for the job, JWSTòÀÙs project team had done everything humanly possible to provide Webb with high quality optics. However, WebbòÀÙs engineers did not believe they had, at least not at that point. In fact so great is their commitment to the success of the mission and to ensuring that JWST should have òÀØtheòÀÙ perfect mirror that they have come up with a formula almost from beyond reality and then based a complex manufacturing scheme upon it.

We may recall from mathematics that a òÀØnegative and a negative makes a positiveòÀÙ, well JWSTòÀÙs engineers are placing their bets on the possibility that òÀØdistortion plus a distortion will equal perfectionòÀÙ. It is for that reason that trial and error computer software is searching all possible distortions of the beryllium mirrors at an everyday temperature, then exploring the changes to the segments once super-cooled to the temperature of space. During this testing period whichever patterns are discovered to òÀÜcureòÀÝ themselves at the smallest degrees Kelvin will be identified as templates whose surface form will then be carefully worked into each mirror segment on terra firma. The fragmented Primary Mirror design itself moreover was postulated as an ingenious method of reducing the severity by which a really large single mirror would be warped. For the case-hardened space-followers among us whose jaws have not already sagged open in amazement however, Webb is also being equipped with òÀØBackup Plan CòÀÙ, a seventh appendage to the six adjustable mirror legs behind each segment. Once at the second Sun-Earth Lagrange point in space if any of WebbòÀÙs mirrors do not behave as expected, and if called on to do so, this extra arm will give the necessary òÀÜshoveòÀÝ to the small of the delinquent mirroròÀÙs back, thus hopefully pushing it into the desired shape. So for the space exploration sceptics whose concern is that public money is being well spent, at least as far as this project goes, itòÀÙs abundantly clear that when Webb arrives at its 1.5million km-distant home from Earth the space administration want to be sure that there is absolutely no contortion its primary mirror will not be able to produce, thus guaranteeing that there will be none of its ambitious mission objectives it will not be able to fulfil.

Hubble and WebbòÀÙs caretakers: As has been the case with Hubble, anyone anywhere in the world will be able to submit proposals for WebbòÀÙs observations. Astronomical committees will review these and select those observational targets thought to be of greatest investigative value for the year ahead. In exchange the authors of the successful proposals will have private access to the data discovered by JWST before it is made publicly available in the Space Telescope Science InstituteòÀÙs online archive, a year later.
Credit: John Bedke & Skip Westphal, STScI

 

 

Although NASA Goddard, Northrup Grumman Aerospace Systems, Ball Aerospace, ESA and CSA are the main parties involved in building the James Webb Space Telescope and getting it into space, thereafter the organisation to take over its management and oversee its ten year mission will be the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI). In May of last year an assembly milestone was reached with construction of the backplane support fixture (BSF) completed; it holds the primary mirror, ISIM, and the rest of the spacecraft together. After full assembly at NGASòÀÙs Redondo Beach facility JWST will sail from LA and through the Panama Canal before commencing its cosmic flight from Guiana in South America. With the final gold-coated Primary Mirror segment delivered in December 2013 the James Webb Space Telescope certainly looks like itòÀÙs well on its way to meeting the target date for launch.

 

To conclude, when we learn what JWSTòÀÙs astronomical abilities will be and the weight of hi-tech telescopic equipment it will wield, we can only be impressed. Although the James Webb Space TelescopeòÀÙs success has still yet to proven in space, perhaps the greatest marvel in the whole 30 year project is the tenacity and perseverance of the people involved, that somewhere along the way they all didnòÀÙt just give up and go home!
(Article by Nick Parke, Education Support Officer)