JWST begins sunshield deployment

by

JWST UPS deploy
Two structures on either side of JWST lowered into position Dec. 28, starting a delays-long process of deploying the spacecraft’s sunshield. Credit: NASA

WASHINGTON — NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has started the process of deploying the sunshield required to keep the spacecraft cold enough to operate, a process that is one of the riskiest aspects of the mission.

NASA announced Dec. 28 the spacecraft controllers had started the multiday process of deploying the sunshield by lowering two components called Unitized Pallet Structures, one on the front side of the spacecraft and the other on the back. The front structure locked into position at 1:21 p.m. Eastern, followed by the rear one about six hours later.

The structures contain the five-layer aluminum-coated Kapton sunshield. Once deployed, the sunshield will block sunlight from reaching the telescope and its instruments, allowing them to cool to their operating temperature of –233 degrees Celsius. Those cold temperatures are required for the telescope to function effectively for infrared observations.

The lowering of the structures is only the start of a complex process to deploy the sunshield. After the tower that holds the telescope is extended, a process scheduled for Dec. 29, the sunshield covers will release the next day. Booms on the left and right sides of the spacecraft will extend a day later, after which cables will shape the five layers into their final form.

The projected timeline for the mission calls for the sunshield deployment process to be completed Jan. 2. However, project engineers cautioned before the launch that deploying the sunshield was perhaps the most difficult process of the overall commissioning of JWST.

“The sunshield is one of those things that is almost inherently indeterministic,” said Mike Menzel, lead mission systems engineer for JWST at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, during a November briefing. “The sunshield is one that has some risk to it.”

At that same briefing, Krystal Puga, JWST spacecraft systems engineer at Northrop Grumman, compared the sunshield deployment process to a “Rube Goldberg machine” in that each step of the deployment triggers the next, using a combination of cables, pulleys and motors.

She added, though, that she was confident that the sunshield will deploy as designed despite that complexity. “We performed multiple deployment testing over several years on both small and full-sized models,” she said. “This gives us the confidence that Webb is going to deploy successfully.”

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Omicron Variant Announced to Change Symptoms of COVID-19: Here are the Symptoms to Watch Out for thumbnail

Omicron Variant Announced to Change Symptoms of COVID-19: Here are the Symptoms to Watch Out for

İngiltere'de koronavirüs belirtileri ile ilgili yeni bir araştırma yapıldı. Gerçek yaşam verilerinden faydalanarak yapılan çalışma, COVID-19 belirtilerinin değiştiğini gözler önüne serdi. Peki insanlar, artık hangi belirtilere dikkat etmeliler? İngiltere'de koronavirüs ile ilgili yeni bir araştırma yapıldı. Profesör Tim Spector liderliğinde ve King’s College London iş birliğinde gerçekleştirilen araştırma, omicron varyantı ile koronavirüs pandemisinin seyrinin değiştiğini ortaya koydu.…
Read More
So könnte der Mars sein Magnetfeld verloren haben thumbnail

So könnte der Mars sein Magnetfeld verloren haben

© Aynur Zakirov / Pixabay Science 14.02.2022 Japanische Forscher*innen haben nachgeahmt, wie der Mars seinen Atmosphärenschutz losgeworden sein könnte. Forscher*innen der University of Tokyo haben eventuell herausgefunden, wie der Mars sein Magnetfeld verloren haben könnte. Magnetfelder sind generell wesentlich, um die Atmosphäre von Planeten wie der Erde oder des Mars zu erhalten. Wie eine Schutzdecke hindert das Feld…
Read More
A comparison of experimental assays and analytical methods for genome-wide identification of active enhancers thumbnail

A comparison of experimental assays and analytical methods for genome-wide identification of active enhancers

AbstractMounting evidence supports the idea that transcriptional patterns serve as more specific identifiers of active enhancers than histone marks; however, the optimal strategy to identify active enhancers both experimentally and computationally has not been determined. Here, we compared 13 genome-wide RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) assays in K562 cells and show that nuclear run-on followed by cap-selection assay…
Read More
'Complete' twist of fallopian tube sent girl to hospital with sudden belly pain thumbnail

‘Complete’ twist of fallopian tube sent girl to hospital with sudden belly pain

An 11-year-old's severe abdominal pain had a very rare cause and required immediate medical attention. (Image credit: Kannika Paison via Getty Images) Doctors discovered that a girl's sudden and mysterious belly pain had a rare cause: One of her fallopian tubes was completely twisted. This condition is rare, overall, but especially rare in children.The 11-year-old girl's
Read More
Noble False Widow Spider captures bats in the attic thumbnail

Noble False Widow Spider captures bats in the attic

False Widow Spider (Steatoda nobilis). Credit: NUI Galway Scientists from the Ryan Institute in NUI Galway have published the first record of a Noble False Widow spider feeding on a protected species of Pipistrelle bats in the UK. The new study, published today in the international journal Ecosphere, demonstrates that False Widow spiders continue to…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share