The image, known as 'Webb's First Deep Field,' will be the deepest and highest-resolution view of the universe ever captured, showing myriad galaxies as they appeared up to 13 billion years in the past, according to NASA.
More images taken by the ground-breaking telescope will be unveiled during a live stream event on Tuesday.President Joe Biden will unveil the much-anticipated first full-color image from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope at an event at The White House at 5 p.m ET. today, agency officials confirmed.
The image, known as"Webb's First Deep Field," will be the deepest and highest-resolution view of the universe ever captured, showing myriad galaxies as they appeared up to 13 billion years in the past, according to NASA. NASA’s James Webb telescope is going to change our understanding of the universe forever. Maurice te Plate of the European Space Agency, who is a systems engineer for the telescope, joined LX News Now host Eric Alvarez to explain why it is a “game changer.”
The agency and its partners, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency, are set to release a separate batch of full-color images from the Webb telescope on Tuesday, but Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and the public will get a sneak peek a day early.
Deutschland Neuesten Nachrichten, Deutschland Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
NASA to show Webb space telescope's first full-colour imagesJames Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful ever sent into orbit, is set to unveil breathtaking new views of the Universe with a clarity that's never been seen before.
Weiterlesen »
NASA to showcase Webb space telescope's first full-color images(Reuters) -Drawing back the curtain to a photo gallery unlike any other, NASA will soon present the first full-color images from its James Webb Space Telescope, a revolutionary apparatus designed to peer through the cosmos to the dawn of the universe. The rest will be released as previously scheduled in a live broadcast and webcast on Tuesday from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, by NASA and its European and Canadian space agency collaborators.
Weiterlesen »
NASA Planning for James Webb to Get Hit by One Micrometeorite Per MonthScientists say the James Webb Space Telescope will get hit by a micrometeorite every month. The telescope is about to return its first deep space images.
Weiterlesen »