Primary
mirror
Hubble (2.4 m)
Webb
(6.5 m)
Sunshield
Microshutter
Visible Infared
13.8 Billions of years after big bang 0
Modern
galaxies
Webb
(2021)
Hubble
(2016)
Protogalaxy
Wavelength (micrometers)
CO 2
CO 2
CH 4
H 2 O
More light absorbed
Star
Coronagraphic masks
Hubble Webb
O 2
CO 2
CO 2 O 3
O 3
O 2
H 2 O
H 2 O
N 2 O
CO 2
Ultraviolet
Exoplanet
Star
Computer and
controls
CH 4
Big
bang
First
stars
Ionization of
hydrogen begins
1 0.5 0.2
Ionization is
complete
2
Peak star
formation
Present-day
universe
10 nm 400 nm 700 nm 1 million nm
600 nm 28,500 nm
Neutral
hydrogen
Human (1.7 m)
Wavelength in nanometers (nm)
P
GalGalaxyGalaxyax MicMicMicrosssssshut plane c mask
C
0.6 0.8 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 1012
onag
809
A golden opportunity
On 18 December, NASA will launch the $10 billion James Webb
Space Telescope, a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.
The segmented mirror–coated with a thin layer of gold–
will work in the infrared, looking back across the universe to
gather the light of the first stars and galaxies. It will also
bring into view the atmospheres of Earth-size exoplanets.
Graphic by Chris Bickel
Science instruments
Cooling systems chill
Webb’s four instruments
below –230°C, lest
their heat pollute the
infrared view.
Multitasking
An array of nearly 250,000
microshutters allows one
instrument to analyze light from
hundreds of galaxies at once.
Mask mandate
To gather the light of a
planet and image it
directly, Webb will mask
the glare of the star.
Honeycomb eye
Webb has more than five times the
light-gathering power of Hubble.
Lighting up a planet
Only a few big, hot exoplanets can be imaged directly. But astronomers can still
probe a planet’s atmosphere by performing transit spectroscopy, or by comparing
light when the star eclipses the planet with light gathered just before.
Peering into the past
Webb will reach farther out in space and further back in time than Hubble or ground-based telescopes. It could show how galaxies evolved from ungainly clumps to the elegant
spirals and ellipses seen today. It should also reveal whether starlight was sufficient to ionize the hydrogen gas that filled the universe, or whether black holes assisted.
Signs of life
If TRAPPIST-1e, an Earth-size exoplanet 40 light-years away, had an atmosphere like
Earth’s, its transit spectrum would look like the synthetic one below. Biosignatures
like oxygen and ozone are at the edge of detectability. Webb is more likely to sense
carbon dioxide and methane, which can have both living and nonliving sources.
Tr a n s i t
A portion of the star’s light
passes through the planet’s
atmosphere as it crosses
the face of the star, gathering
telltale absorption lines.
Eclipse
Subtracting an eclipse spectrum from
a “full-face” spectrum leaves just the planet’s.
Full face
Just before an eclipse, the
planet’s emitted light
makes a tiny contribution
to the total spectrum.
DATA: RYAN MACDONALD/CORNELL UNIVERSITY; NASA