ELMORE, Ohio (AP) -
Designing and constructing a telescope that can capture faint particles of
light from the early periods of the universe has its share of obstacles. One
challenge was to design lightweight mirrors durable enough to withstand extreme
cold.
berylium.
Beryllium, a strong,
lightweight metal, is used in military weapons, golf clubs, auto
parts and in the cellular industry. Brush Wellman makes the metal at the
company's Elmore plant near Toledo.
It has taken about 80 Brush
Wellman workers two years to make the 18 hexagon mirrors the size of a card
table.
The last of the panels were
shipped out last week. The panels will be ground and polished and coated with a
reflective layer of gold.
The telescope is set for
launch in 2011 and could give scientists an unprecedented view of the early
universe.
"We're looking back to the
first objects that formed after the Big Bang,'' said John Mather,
Webb's senior scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
"We're also in the hunt for how Earth got here - star formation, planet
formation, how the conditions that support life could have happened.''
NASA chose beryllium over
glass, which is what the Hubble telescope's mirror is made of, because the
metal is stiff and dampens vibration so that the view is stable.
Webb's 21-foot-wide mirror
is six times the area of Hubble's and weighs about one-third of Hubble's 2,200
pounds.
Hubble has been providing
views of distant stars and galaxies since it went into orbit in 1990. But it
can't spot the oldest, farthest-away celestial bodies.
The Webb telescope's detectors
are far more advanced and should be able to capture infrared waves.
Its builders know they have
to get everything right the first time because it will be too far from Earth to
reach if any repairs are needed.
"It was obvious we had to
do everything well,'' said Keith Smith, manager of Brush Wellman's Elmore
plant.
James
Webb Space Telescope: Diving Deep into the Universe