The Webb Telescope -- named for the NASA
administrator during the Apollo lunar exploration program -- is managed by
Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, with Northrop Grumman Space Technology
as the lead contractor. NASA plans to choose one of the competing mirror
prototypes, built by Eastman Kodak Co. and Ball Aerospace, by early fall.
The Marshall center was chosen to test the mirrors
because it has a test chamber big enough to hold the mirrors, which are about as
tall as a two-story house, and capable of reaching the super-cold temperatures
they would face in outer space -- about minus 370 degrees.
Because the telescope seeks invisible infrared, or
heat, radiation, it must be placed in a cold location in space to avoid emitting
-- and thus detecting -- its own heat, Stahl said.
"It's sort of like trying to drive into a sunset,''
he said. ``It's hard to see the road when you've got a lot of stray light. And
particularly if you had a dirty window ... a lot of bug spatter on the car. That
would cause you to have a hard time trying to see the image.''
To stay cold, the telescope has to be sent some
940,000 miles from the Earth -- four times farther away than the moon is.
Astronauts can't travel that far into space, so NASA will have limited ability
to correct problems with the mirrors once the telescope is in orbit, Stahl said.
That fact, coupled with the very public problems the
space agency had with the initial images from the much-hyped Hubble, make for a
great deal of testing on the ground.
"I like to say, we're not going to repeat the
mistakes that were learned on the Hubble with the James Webb. We're going to
make our own mistakes,'' Stahl said. ``We don't know what they are yet, but I
promise the taxpayers that there will be mistakes,because you can't do what
we're doing and not make a mistake.''
One safeguard in case of a big mistake is the
relatively low cost. A price tag of $800 million might not sound like a bargain,
but it's less than the cost of two manned service missions to the Hubble, which
are about $500 million each.
Still, the idea is to get it right the first time
with extensive testing. Part of those tests include trying to predict how the
telescope will bend and warp under such cold temperatures and without the
effects of gravity. The margin for error is infinitesimal: the problem with the
Hubble, Stahl said, was a matter of 6 microns of variation in the flatness of
the mirror; the average human hair is about 200 microns wide.
Put another way, if the mirror were the size of the
continental United States, the tallest mountain could be only the height of a
softball, or about 4 inches.
These are mind-boggling measurements and problems,
but consider the goal of the Webb Telescope. It will begin looking at the
farthest reaches of space observed by the Hubble and try to see some 10 billion
to 11 billion light years away. Scientists believe that will put them within a
half-billion years of the first light of the universe.
Astronomers believe it's that first light _ caused by
the explosions of the first stars, some 2 billion years after the Big Bang _
that created the elements needed for life: carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and more.
"After that point you can start forming planets, and
most importantly start forming organic molecules from which our type of life
originated,'' said Dimitar Sasselov, an astronomer with the Harvard
University-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Sasselov, who studies planets outside our solar
system, said the Webb Telescope will help astronomers look for the ``signatures
of atmospheres and hopefully biological activity'' on other planets.
John Mather, senior project scientist for the Webb
Telescope at NASA's Goddard Center, said that while the new telescope will help
astronomers fill in some gaps in the knowledge about life's origin, it will have
its limitations. Future space telescopes scheduled for launch in 2020 and beyond
already are being conceived.
"We will certainly make a step. We certainly will not
make the end,'' Mather said. ``We're primarily aimed at the early universe, so
it takes a little bit different equipment to do a good job on planets and
life.''
Still, Sasselov looks forward to the work he and
other astronomers will be able to do once the Webb Telescope is in orbit. In the
meantime, he's content to seek the planets he'll study when that day comes.
"Eight more years in the 10 billion years that light
travels is nothing," he said. "I am patient enough to wait for
that."