James Webb Space Telescope

James Webb Space Telescope
James Webb Space Telescope
James Webb Telescope Design.jpg
General information
Organization NASA[1], with significant contributions from ESA and CSA
Major contractors Northrop Grumman
Ball Aerospace
Launch date Uncertain[2]
Launched from Guiana Space Centre ELA-3
Kourou, French Guiana
Launch vehicle Ariane 5 (planned)
Mission length 5 years (design)
10 years (goal)
Mass 6,200 kg (14,000 lb)
Orbit period 1 year
Location 1.5 million km from Earth
(Lagrangian point L2 halo orbit)
Telescope style Korsch (3 Mirror Anastigmat)
Wavelength 0.6 (orange) to 28.5 µm (microns) (mid-infrared)
Diameter ~6.5 m (21 ft)
Collecting area 25 m2 (270 sq ft)
Focal length 131.4 m (431 ft)
Instruments
NIRCam Near IR Camera
NIRSpec Near IR Spectrograph
MIRI Mid IR Instrument
TFI Tunable Filter Imager
FGS Fine Guidance Sensor
Website NASA United States
ESA b Europe
CSA/ASC Canada
CNES France
3/4 view of JWST from the "top" (opposite side from the Sun).

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), previously known as Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST), is a planned next-generation space telescope, optimized for observations in the infrared. The main technical features are a large and very cold 6.5 meter diameter mirror, an observing position far from Earth, orbiting the Earth-Sun L2 point, and four specialized instruments. The combination of these features will give JWST unprecedented resolution and sensitivity from long-wavelength visible to the mid-infrared, enabling its two main scientific goals — studying the birth and evolution of galaxies, and the formation of stars and planets.

Formally planned since around 1996,[3] JWST is a formal successor to the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope. The telescope is an international collaboration of about 17 countries[4] led by NASA, and with significant contributions from the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency. It is named after James E. Webb, the second administrator of NASA.

JWST's capabilities will enable a broad range of investigations across many subfields of astronomy.[5] One particular goal involves observing some of the most distant objects in the universe, beyond the reach of current ground and space based instruments. This includes the very first stars, the epoch of reionization, and the formation of the first galaxies. Another goal is understanding the formation of stars and planets. This will include imaging molecular clouds and star-forming clusters, studying the debris disks around stars, direct imaging of planets, and spectroscopic examination of planetary transits.

The mission was under review for cancellation by the United States Congress. At that time, about 3 billion USD had been spent,[6] and more than 75 percent of its hardware is either in production or undergoing testing.[7] In November 2011, congress reversed plans to cancel the JWST and instead capped additional funding to complete the project at $8 billion.[8]

Contents

Overview

It originated as the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST) in 1996, based on generic planning for Hubble successor at least as early as 1993.[9] It was renamed in 2002 after NASA's second administrator (1961–1968) James E. Webb (1906–1992), noted for playing a role in the Apollo program and establishing scientific research as a core NASA activity.[10]

The telescope is a project of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the United States space agency, with international collaboration from the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency, including contributions from fifteen nations.

Europe's contributions were formalized in 2007 with a ESA-NASA Memorandum of Understanding, that includes the Ariane-5 ECA launcher, NIRSpec instrument, MIRI Optical Bench Assembly, and manpower support for operations.[11]

The JWST will orbit the Sun approximately 1,500,000 kilometres (930,000 mi) beyond the Earth, at the L2 Lagrange point (L2 halo orbit). Objects at the L2 point orbit the Sun in synchrony with the Earth, which allows the JWST to use one radiation shield, positioned between the telescope and the Sun, to protect it from the Sun's heat and light and a small amount of additional infrared from the Earth. The telescope will be in a very large 800,000 kilometres (500,000 mi) radius halo orbit around L2, and so will avoid any part of Earth's shadow.[Note 1] From the JWST's position, the Earth will be very close to the Sun's position but not eclipse it, while the Moon will show a tiny crescent phase during its maximum angular distance from the Sun.[12]

JWST configured for launch

The telescope plans a launch on an Ariane 5 rocket on a five-year mission (10-year goal) with a planned launch date in 2018.[13]

Comparisons

Compared to other future observatories, most have already been canceled or put on hold including Terrestrial Planet Finder (2011), Space Interferometry Mission (2010), Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (2011), and the International X-ray Observatory (2011), leaving the telescope as the last big NASA astrophysics mission of its generation. With the cancellation of Project Constellation (2010) and the retirement of the Space Shuttle (2011), it is one of NASA's only remaining big space projects.

The telescope's delays and cost increases can be compared to the Hubble space telescope.[14] When it formally started in 1972, what came to be known as Hubble, had a then estimated development cost of $300 million USD (or about 1 billion USD in 2006 USD),[14] but by the time it was sent into orbit in 1990, cost about four times that.[14] In addition, new instruments and servicing missions increased the cost to at least 9 billion USD by 2006.[14]

A 2006 article in Nature magazine noted a study in 1984 by the Space Science board, which estimated that a next generation infrared observatory would cost 4 billion USD (about 7 billion in 2006 dollars).[14]

Other major telescope concepts that are either canceled, studies, or not approaching launch include MAXIM (Microarcsecond X-ray Imaging Mission), SAFIR (Single Aperture Far-Infrared Observatory), SUVO (Space Ultraviolet-Visible Observatory), SPECS (Submillimeter Probe of the Evolution of Cosmic Structure), and the aforementioned canceled TPF, SIM, LISA, and IXO.

Development

Comparison with Hubble primary mirror.

JWST is the maturation of the aforementioned Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST) plans. Some previously floated concepts include 8 meter aperture, 3 AU orbit, and NEXUS precursor telescope mission.[15][16] A focus on the near to mid-infrared was preferred for three main reasons; high-redshift objects have their visible emissions shifted into the infrared, cold objects such as debris disks and planets emit most strongly in the infrared, and this band is very hard to study from the ground, or by existing space telescopes such as Hubble.

JWST has a planned mass about half of Hubble, but its primary mirror (a 6.5 meter diameter gold-coated beryllium reflector) has a collecting area about 5 times larger (4.5 m2 vs. 25 m2). The JWST is oriented towards near infrared astronomy, but can also see orange and red visible light as well as the mid infrared region, depending on the instrument.

Early development work for a Hubble successor between 1989–1994, led to the Hi-Z[17] telescope concept, a fully baffled 4 meter aperture infrared telescope going out to 3 AU in its orbit.[18] The distant orbit helped reduce light noise from zodiacal dust.[18] In the "faster, better, cheaper" era in the mid-1990s, NASA leaders pushed for a space telescope with low-cost and 8 meter primary mirror diameter.[19] The result was plans for a NGST for 500 million USD, 8 meter aperture, and located at L2.[19] By 2002, as the concept matured into more of a technical reality, it was reduced to 6 meters aperture and the cost was estimated at around 2.5 Billion USD[14]

Some concepts from early in development:

In 2002, TRW was bought by Northrop Grumman

Understanding goals

JWST is the formal successor to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), but since its primary emphasis is on infrared observation, it is equally fair to consider it a successor to the Spitzer Space Telescope. In fact, JWST will far surpass both those telescopes, being able to see many more and much older stars and galaxies.[21] Observing in the infrared is a key technique for achieving this, because it better penetrates obscuring dust and gas, allows observation of dim cooler objects, and because of cosmological redshift.

Two alternate Hubble Space Telescope views of the Carina Nebula, comparing visible (top) and infrared (bottom) astronomy

Dust Penetration: Compare the two images of the Carina Nebula taken with the HST (left margin). Though both images are of the same astronomical object taken by HST, the top image was photographed utilizing the visible spectrum, whereas the bottom image was taken in the infrared, using the HST's WFC3 upgrade. Notice how more stars can be counted almost anywhere in the bottom image (infrared spectrum) than in the same corresponding location of the top image (visible spectrum). This demonstrates the power of infrared observations to penetrate the obscuration due to gas and dust that blocks much of the scene in visible spectrum images, so that the stars lying behind the gas and dust become easier to see.[22] Infrared astronomy can penetrate dusty regions of space, such as molecular clouds where stars are born, the circumstellar disks that give rise to planets, and the cores of active galaxies which are often cloaked in gas and dust.[22]

Cool objects: Furthermore, relatively cool objects (in this context meaning temperatures less than several thousand degrees) emit their radiation primarily in the infrared, as described by Planck's Law. As a result, most objects that are cooler than stars are better studied in the infrared. This includes the clouds of the interstellar medium, the "failed stars" called brown dwarfs, planets both in our own and other solar systems, and comets and Kuiper belt objects.

The distant universe: Looking beyond our own galaxy to more distant galaxy clusters, quasars, and gamma-ray bursts, the most distant objects viewable are also the "youngest," that is, they were formed during a time period closer in time to that of the Big Bang.[21] We see them today because their light has taken billions of years to reach us. Because the universe is expanding, as the light travels it becomes red-shifted and are therefore easier to see if viewed in the infrared.[22] JWST's infrared capabilities are expected to let it see all the way to the very first galaxies forming just a few hundred million years after the big bang.[23]

Mission

Infrared observations see HUDF-JD2

The JWST's primary scientific mission has four main components: to search for light from the first stars and galaxies which formed in the Universe after the Big Bang, to study the formation and evolution of galaxies, to understand the formation of stars and planetary systems and to study planetary systems and the origins of life.[24] All of these jobs can be done more effectively by analyzing near-infrared light rather than light in the visible part of the spectrum. For this reason the JWST's instruments will not measure visible or ultraviolet light like the Hubble Telescope, but will have a much greater capacity to collect infrared light. In its present design, the JWST will detect a range of wavelengths from 0.6 (orange light) to 28 micrometers (deep infrared radiation at about 100 K (−173 °C; −280 °F)).

Due to a combination of redshift, dust obscuration, and the low temperatures of many of the sources to be studied, the JWST must be able to measure infrared light with a very high degree of precision. To ensure that infrared emissions coming from the telescope or its instruments do not interfere with these observations, the entire observatory must operate at a very low temperature. Moreover, it must be well shielded from radiation coming from the Sun, the Earth and the Moon. To accomplish this, the JWST incorporates a large metalized fan-fold sunshield, which will unfurl to block infrared radiation and allow the telescope to radiatively cool down to roughly 40 K (−233.2 °C; −387.7 °F). The telescope's location at the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrange point ensures that the Earth and Sun occupy roughly the same relative position in the telescope's view and thus make the operation of this shield possible.[25]

The observatory is currently scheduled to be launched by an Ariane 5 from Guiana Space Centre Kourou, French Guiana into an L2 orbit with a launch mass of approximately 6.2 tons. After a commissioning period of approximately six months the observatory will begin the science mission which is expected to last a minimum of five years. The potential for extension of the science mission beyond this period exists and the observatory is being designed accordingly.[26]

Orbit

A diagram showing the five Lagrangian points of the Sun-Earth system. JWST will be located in a halo orbit around L2, where the Earth and Sun are directly behind it at all times, but it is in direct sunlight to power its solar arrays
JWST will not be exactly at the L2 point, but orbit it in a halo orbit

The orbit of the JWST will be an elliptical orbit (with a radius of 800,000 kilometres (500,000 mi)) around the semi-stable second Lagrange point, or L2. The Earth-Sun L2 point, about which the Webb telescope will orbit, is 1,500,000 kilometres (930,000 mi) from the Earth, nearly 4 times farther than the distance between the Earth to the Moon.[12] At such a great distance, the Webb telescope would be more difficult to service after launch than the Hubble telescope. Nevertheless, a docking ring was added to the design in 2007 to facilitate this possibility, either by a robot or future crewed spacecraft such as MPCV.[27]

Normally, an object circling the Sun further out than the Earth would take more than one year to complete its orbit. However, the balance of gravitational pull at the L2 point (in particular, the extra pull from Earth as well as the Sun) means that JWST will keep up with the Earth as it goes around the Sun. The combined gravitational forces of the Sun and the Earth can hold a spacecraft at this point, so that in theory it takes no rocket thrust to keep a spacecraft in orbit around L2. In reality, the stable point is comparable to that of a ball balanced upon a saddle shape. Along one direction any perturbation will drive the ball toward the stable point, while in the crossing direction the ball, if disturbed, will fall away from the stable point. Thus some station-keeping is required, but with little energy expended (only 2–4 m/s per year,[28] from the total budget of 150 m/s).[29]

Since the JWST must be kept very cold to make accurate observations of distant astronomical objects, it has been designed with a large sunshield that blocks light and heat from the Sun. In order for such a shield to work properly, the Sun's rays must be constantly coming from the same direction. To achieve this outcome, JWST will be put into a relatively large "halo orbit" around L2. From the L2 point itself, the Earth eclipses 90% of the disk of the Sun at all times and neither one appears to move at all, though lateral movement of the Moon can be seen. However, the radius of the Webb telescope's orbit around L2 will be so large that neither the Earth nor Moon will eclipse the Sun, allowing the shield to deal with a relatively constant sunlight environment. This was considered to be more important than attempting to utilize the Earth's shadow to block some of the sunlight, in an orbit nearer the exact L2 point.[citation needed]

Optics and instruments

Optical design

JWST's primary mirror is a 6.5 meter diameter gold-coated beryllium reflector with a collecting area of 25 m2. This is too large for contemporary launch vehicles, so the mirror is composed of 18 hexagonal segments, which will unfold after the telescope is launched. Image plane wavefront sensing through phase retrieval will be used to position the mirror segments in the correct location using very precise micro-motors. Subsequent to this initial configuration they will only need occasional updates every few days to retain optimal focus.[30] This is unlike terrestrial telescopes like the Keck which continually adjust their mirror segments using active optics to overcome the effects of gravitational and wind loading, and is made possible because of the lack of environmental disturbances to a telescope in space.

JWST's optical design is a so-called three-mirror anastigmat,[31] which makes use of curved secondary and tertiary mirrors to deliver images that are free of optical aberrations over a wide field. In addition there is a fast steering mirror, which can adjust its position many times a second to provide image stabilization.

Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. is the principal optical subcontractor for the JWST program, led by prime contractor Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, under a contract from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt, Maryland.[32] Eighteen primary mirror segments, secondary, tertiary and fine steering mirrors, plus flight spares have been fabricated and polished by Ball Aerospace based on beryllium segment blanks manufactured by includes Axsys, Brush Wellman, and Tinsley Laboratories. As of June 2011, the first set of six fully completed mirror segments, including rigid supporting frames and cryogenic actuators, is undergoing final testing at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center; testing all of the remaining mirrors will be complete by fall 2011[33]

Scientific instruments

The Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) contains four science instruments and a guide camera.[34]

NIRCam model

NIRCam (Near InfraRed Camera) is an infrared imager which will have a spectral coverage ranging from the edge of the visible (0.6 micrometers) through the near infrared (5 micrometers).[35] NIRCam will also serve as the observatory's wavefront sensor, which is required for wavefront sensing and control activities. NIRCam is being built by a team led by the University of Arizona, with Principal Investigator Marcia Rieke. The industrial partner is Lockheed-Martin's Advanced Technology Center located in Palo Alto, California.[36]

The observatory will also perform spectroscopy over the same wavelength range with the NIRSpec (Near InfraRed Spectrograph). NIRSpec is being built by the European Space Agency at ESTEC in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, leading a team involving EADS Astrium, Ottobrunn, and Friedrichshafen, Germany, and the Goddard Space Flight Center: the NIRSpec project scientist is Peter Jakobsen. The NIRSpec design provides 3 observing modes: a low resolution mode using a prism, an R~1000 multi-object mode and an R~2700 integral field unit or long-slit spectroscopy mode.[37] Switching of the modes is done by operating a wavelength preselection mechanism called Filter Wheel Assembly and selecting a correspondent dispersive element (prism or grating) using the Grating Wheel Assembly mechanism. Both mechanisms are based on the successful ISOPHOT wheel mechanisms of the Infrared Space Observatory. The multi-object mode relies on a complex micro-shutter mechanism to allow for simultaneous observations of hundreds of individual objects anywhere in NIRSpec's field of view. The mechanisms and their optical elements are being designed, integrated and tested by Carl Zeiss Optronics GmbH of Oberkochen, Germany, under contract from Astrium.

The mid-infrared wavelength range from 5 to 27 micrometers will be measured by the MIRI (Mid InfraRed Instrument), which contains both a mid-IR camera and an imaging spectrometer.[38] MIRI is being developed as a collaboration between NASA and a consortium of European countries, and is led by George Rieke (University of Arizona) and Gillian Wright (UK Astronomy Technology Centre, Edinburgh, part of the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)).[36] MIRI features similar wheel mechanisms as NIRSpec which are also developed and built by Carl Zeiss Optronics GmbH under contract from the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg.

The FGS (Fine Guidance Sensor), led by the Canadian Space Agency under project scientist John Hutchings (Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, National Research Council of Canada), is used to stabilize the line-of-sight of the observatory during science observations. Measurements by the FGS are used both to control the overall orientation of the spacecraft and to drive the fine steering mirror for image stabilization. The Canadian Space Agency is also providing a Tunable Filter Imager (TFI) module for astronomical narrow-band imaging in the 1.5 to 5 micrometer wavelength range, led by principal investigator René Doyon at the University of Montreal.[36][39] Because the TFI is physically mounted together with the FGS, they are often referred to as a single unit, but they serve entirely different purposes, with one being a scientific instrument and the other being a part of the observatory's support infrastructure.

NIRCam, MIRI, and TFI all feature starlight-blocking coronagraphs for observation of faint targets such as extrasolar planets and circumstellar disks very close to bright stars.

The infrared detectors for the NIRCam, NIRSpec, FGS, and TFI modules are being provided by Teledyne Imaging Sensors (formerly Rockwell Scientific Company).

Construction and engineering

Mirror segments are prepared for tests in 2010.
Six of the James Webb Space Telescope beryllium mirror segments undergoing a series of cryogenic tests at the X-ray & Cryogenic Facility at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
A James Webb Space Telescope primary mirror segment, coated with gold.

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is leading the management of the observatory project. The project scientist for the James Webb Space Telescope is John C. Mather. Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems serves as the primary contractor for the development and integration of the observatory. They are responsible for developing and building the spacecraft element, which includes both the spacecraft bus and sunshield. Ball Aerospace has been subcontracted to develop and build the Optical Telescope Element (OTE). Goddard Space Flight Center is also responsible for providing the Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM).[32]

NASA is considering plans to add a grapple feature so future spacecraft might visit the observatory to fix gross deployment problems, such as a stuck solar panel or antenna. However, the telescope itself would not be serviceable, so that astronauts would not be able to perform tasks such as swapping instruments, as with the Hubble Telescope.[40][41][42][43] Final approval for such an addition was to be considered as part of the Preliminary Design Review in March 2008.

Most of the data processing on the telescope is done by conventional single board computers.[44] The conversion of the analog science data to digital form is performed by the custom-built SIDECAR ASIC (System for Image Digitization, Enhancement, Control And Retrieval Application Specific Integrated Circuit). It is said that the SIDECAR ASIC will include all the functions of a 20-pound instrument box in a package the size of a half-dollar, and consume only 11 milliwatts of power. Since this conversion must be done close to the detectors, on the cool side of the telescope, the low power use of this IC will be important for maintaining the low temperature required for optimal operation of the JWST.[45]

Ground support and operations

The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland has been selected as the Science and Operations Center (S&OC) for JWST. In this capacity, STScI will be responsible for the scientific operation of the telescope and delivery of data products to the astronomical community.[26] Data will be transmitted from JWST to the ground via NASA's Deep Space Network, processed and calibrated at STScI, and then distributed online to astronomers worldwide. Similar to how Hubble is operated, anyone, anywhere in the world, will be allowed to submit proposals for observations. Each year several committees of astronomers will peer review the submitted proposals to select the programs to observe in the coming year. The authors of the chosen proposals will typically have one year of private access to the new observations, after which the data will become publicly available for download by anyone from the online archive at STScI.

Program status

NASA, space science industry, and government officials, with a full-size telescope model at Maryland Science Center in Baltimore.

The mission had been working towards a launch date in 2014, but during the summer of 2010 an independent review panel determined that 2015 was the earliest possible launch date, and even that would require a significant influx of additional funding.[46] Notably, this review commended the JWST project for being in excellent technical shape with most flight hardware making good progress to completion. The delay and cost overruns are due to an unrealistic original budget and insufficient program management. In response, NASA instituted significant management changes in the JWST project, but the need for increased funding has led to a substantial mission delay. As of June 2011, it appears likely that JWST will launch no sooner than 2017 [47] or 2018.[48] A more specific launch date plan should become determined by the end of 2011, pending the FY2012 US federal budget process.[49]

By 2011, the JWST program is in the final design and fabrication phase (Phase C). As is typical for a complex design that cannot be changed once launched, there are detailed reviews of every portion of design, construction, and proposed operation. New technological frontiers have been pioneered by the program, and it has passed its design reviews. In the 1990s it was unknown if a telescope so large and light was possible.[50]

Early full scale model on display at NASA Goddard (2005)

In April 2006, the program was independently reviewed following a re-planning phase begun in August 2005. The review concluded the program was technically sound, but that funding phasing at NASA needed to be changed. NASA has re-phased its JWST budgets accordingly. The August 2005 re-planning was necessitated by the cost growth revealed in Spring 2005.[51] The primary technical outcomes of the re-planning are significant changes in the integration and test plans, a 22-month launch delay (from 2011 to 2013), and elimination of system level testing for observatory modes at wavelength shorter than 1.7 micrometers. Other major features of the observatory are unchanged following the re-planning efforts.


Selected Events
Year Events
1996 NGST started
2002 named JWST, 8 to 6 m
2004 NEXUS cancelled[52]
2007 esa/nasa MOU
2010 MCDR passed
2011 Proposed cancel

As of the 2005 re-plan, the life-cycle cost of the project was estimated at about US$4.5 billion. This comprises approximately US$3.5 billion for design, development, launch and commissioning, and approximately US$1.0 billion for ten years of operations.[51] ESA is contributing about 300 million, including the launch,[53] and the Canadian Space Agency about $39M Canadian.[54] As of May 2007 costs were still on target,[55] but by 2010 cost over-runs were impacting other programs, though JWST itself remains on schedule.[56]

In January 2007, nine of the ten technology development items in the program successfully passed a non-advocate review.[57] These technologies were deemed sufficiently mature to retire significant risks in the program. The remaining technology development item (the MIRI cryocooler) completed its technology maturation milestone in April 2007. This technology review represented the beginning step in the process that ultimately moved the program into its detailed design phase (Phase C).

In March 2008, the project successfully completed its Preliminary Design Review (PDR). In April 2008, the project passed the Non-Advocate Review. Other passed reviews include the Integrated Science Instrument Module review in March 2009, the Optical Telescope Element review completed in October 2009, and the Sunshield review completed in January 2010.

In April 2010, the telescope passed the technical portion of its Mission Critical Design Review (MCDR). Passing the MCDR signified the integrated observatory will meet all science and engineering requirements for its mission.[58] The MCDR encompassed all previous design reviews. The project schedule underwent review during the months following the MCDR, in a process called the Independent Comprehensive Review Panel, which led to a re-plan of the mission aiming for 2015, but as late as 2018. The spacecraft design, which passed a preliminary review in 2009, will continue toward final approval in 2011.

The first six primary mirror segments being prepped for final cryogenic acceptance testing.

In April 2011, cryogenic testing of a six-mirror array began. This test is to ensure the mirrors perform to specifications at the temperatures they will encounter.[59]

In July 2011, the United States House of Representatives Appropriations Committee on Commerce, Justice and Science proposed cancelling the telescope project because it "is billions of dollars over budget and plagued by poor management". The estimated cost had risen to $6.5 billion at that time.[60] As of August 2011, it is estimated to cost 8.7 Billion USD for the telescope and five years of operation, and launch in 2018.[61][62] However, on November 18, 2011 the first appropriations bill of the 2012 United States federal budget was passed, maintaining funding for the telescope.[63]

Reported cost and schedule issues

Then-planned launch & costs
Year Launch Budget Plan
1997 2007[50] 0.5 Billion USD[50]
1998 2007[64] 1[14]
1999 2007 to 2008[65] 1[14]
2000 2009[66] 1.8[14]
2002 2010[67] 2.5[14]
2003 2011[68] 2.5[14]
2005 2013 3[69]
2006 2014 4.5[70]
2008 2014 5.1[71]
2010 2015 to 2016 6.5
2011 2018 8.7[62]
Estimated total cost
Year Cost (billion USD)
1997
0.5
1998
1
1999
1
2000
1.8
2002
2.5
2003
2.5
2005
3
2006
4.5
2008
5.1
2010
6.5
2011
8.7

In June 2011, it was reported that the Webb telescope will cost at least four times more than originally proposed, and launch at least seven years late. Initial budget estimates were that the observatory would cost $1.6 billion and launch in 2011. NASA has now scheduled the telescope for a 2018 launch, though outside analysts suggest the flight could slip past 2020. The latest estimated price tag for the telescope is now $6.8 billion.[72]

Some scientists have expressed concerns about growing costs and schedule delays for the Webb telescope, which they see as competing for scant astronomy budgets and thus threatening funding for other space science programs. A review of NASA budget records and status reports by journalists at Florida Today show the Webb observatory is plagued by many of the same problems that have plagued several other major NASA projects. Mistakes included: underestimates of the telescope’s cost that failed to budget for expected technical glitches, and failure to act on warnings that budgets were being exceeded, thus extending the schedule and increasing costs further.[72]

Proposed U.S. withdrawal

On 6 July 2011, the United States House of Representatives' appropriations committee on Commerce, Justice, and Science moved to cancel the James Webb project by proposing an FY2012 budget that removed $1.9bn from NASA's overall budget, of which roughly one quarter was for JWST. This budget proposal was approved by subcommittee vote the following day, but it remains to be seen how the rest of the US House of Representatives and Senate will weigh in on this issue during the ongoing federal budget negotiations.[60][73][74][75]. In November 2011, congress reversed plans to cancel the JWST and instead capped additional funding to complete the project at $8 billion.

The committee charged that the project was "billions of dollars over budget and plagued by poor management". The telescope was originally estimated to cost $1.6bn but the cost estimate grew throughout the early development reaching about $5bn by the time the mission was formally confirmed for construction start in 2008. In summer 2010, the mission passed its Critical Design Review with excellent grades on all technical matters, but schedule and cost slips at that time prompted US Senator Barbara Mikulski to call for an independent review of the project. The Independent Comprehensive Review Panel (ICRP) chaired by J. Casani (JPL) found that the earliest launch date was in late 2015 at an extra cost of $1.5bn (for a total of $6.5bn). They also pointed out that this would have required extra funding in FY2011 and FY2012 and that any later launch date would lead to a higher total cost.[76] Because the runaway budget diverted funding from other research, the science journal Nature described the James Webb as "the telescope that ate astronomy".[77] However, termination of the project as proposed by the House appropriation committee does not provide funding to other missions as the JWST line is simply terminated with the funding simply leaving astrophysics (and leaving the NASA budget) entirely.

The American Astronomical Society has issued a statement in support of JWST,[78] as did US Senator Barbara Mikulski.[79] A number of editorials supporting JWST have appeared in the international press [80][81][82]

A review of the program released in August 2011, says the cost for the telescope and 5 years of operations will be 8.7 Billion USD with a planned launch in 2018.[62] Of that price about 800 million USD is for the 5 years of operations.[71] By September 2011, NASA will have spent 3.5 billion USD.[71]

However, on November 18, 2011 the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2012, the first appropriations bill of the 2012 United States federal budget, was enacted, maintaining funding for the telescope.[63]

Public displays

Model in Seattle, Washington

A large telescope model has been on display at various places since 2005: Seattle, Washington; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Paris, France; Greenbelt, Maryland; Rochester, New York; Orlando, Florida; Dublin, Ireland; Montreal, Canada; Hatfield, United Kingdom; Munich, Germany; and Manhattan, New York. The model was built by the main contractor, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems.[83]

In May 2007, a full-scale model of the telescope was assembled for display at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum on the National Mall, Washington DC. The model was intended to give the viewing public a better understanding of the size, scale and complexity of the satellite. The model is significantly different from the telescope, as the model must withstand gravity and weather, so is constructed mainly of aluminum and steel measuring approximately 24×12×12 m (79×39×39 ft) and weighs 5.5 tonnes (12,000 lb).

More recently, the model was on ongoing display in New York City's Battery Park during the 2010 World Science Festival. It served as the backdrop for a panel discussion featuring Nobel Prize laureate John C. Mather, astronaut John Grunsfeld and astronomer Heidi Hammel, which was followed by a star party hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson, the director of the city's Hayden Planetarium.

A model is on display at the front of the Maryland Science Center from October 18-31.

The Plan

3/4 view of the top
Bottom (sun facing side)

Notes

  1. ^ The Earth does not fully block the solar disc at the distance of the Earth-Sun L2, which is just outside of the Earth's umbra, but JWST avoids even the penumbra

References

  1. ^ "NASA JWST FAQ "Who are the partners in the Webb project?"". NASA. http://www.jwst.nasa.gov/faq.html#partners. Retrieved 2011-11-18. 
  2. ^ "Spaceflight Now article "Budget pessimism may drive JWST launch date to 2018"". Spaceflight Now. http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n1104/13jwst/. Retrieved 2011-06-09. 
  3. ^ ESA JWST Timeline
  4. ^ NASA - JWST
  5. ^ John Mather (2006). "JWST Science". http://www.nsf.gov/attachments/106804/public/mather_jwst_science_update.ppt. 
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