Google Arts has the best photos of the James Webb telescope, so you can access them for free - How smart Technology is changing lives

James Webb telescope illustration. (photo: NASA)

It James Webb telescope has succeeded in photographing celestial bodies spectacularly which until now has not been known in detail. However, the $10 billion space satellite isn’t launched just to bring you new wallpapers out of the world. In addition to space research, James Webb will have important missions: study the solar system, and it’s already started.

True, the solar system still has many unknowns. Even recently POT decided to direct James Webb viewers to a not-so-close neighbor, Jupiter.

Through publications on its official website, and in googleArts&Culture, They show the images they obtained of the gas giant and other impressive space images.

Photo of Jupiter made by the James Webb Telescope.  (photo: NASA)

If James Webb could take impressive pictures from billions of light years away, just imagine what it could do in the solar system.

Although the mission focused on space exploration for the first few hundred million years, that too will study the solar system beyond the asteroid belt.

Jupiter can be seen in this new image. Yes indeed, Right now it’s not a spectacular picture. And it’s a snapshot that only James Webb engineers used when calibrating their instruments. As a result, you won’t find bright, high-contrast photos, but rather something reminiscent of test images taken by JWST in space.

Another image taken by the James Webb Telescope

Webb’s infrared vision is designed to study each phase of over 13.5 billion years of cosmic history, starting from about 200 million years after the Big Bang, period of time that we had never studied before.

In a process called cosmological Red Shift, light stretches from shorter wavelengths to longer wavelengths as the universe expands. That means light from early stars and galaxies reaches us as infrared light, which Webb specializes in.

Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope.  (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)
Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope. (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)

The spiral and elliptical galaxies that most people are familiar with don’t always look like this. Webb can not only analyze how galaxies form, interact, and change, but You can even track its composition and structure.

At the center of almost all galaxies is black hole supermassive, and Webb will learn more about how these black holes affect their host galaxies. If any readers want to know how much does a black hole weigh Webb can also measure the mass of one.

Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope.  (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)
Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope. (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)

Stars and planets form in clouds of gas and dust. Visible light cannot penetrate these clouds, but infrared light can. As a demonstration, here are the icons ‘Pillars of Creation’ taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in visible light.

And this again in near-infrared light, also because Hubble. As you can see in the photo below this paragraph, many previously hidden stars are revealed. Webb’s capabilities will make it possible to see infrared light from celestial bodies with greater clarity and sensitivity than Hubble.

Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope.  (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)
Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope. (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)

Finally, because Webb can peer into the dusty clouds where stars form, he will be able to study the conditions that lead to new stars and investigate where very young stars live.

Webb will also study gas and dust ejected from dying stars.

Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope.  (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)
Photo taken by the James Webb Telescope. (photo: NASA/Google Arts & Culture)

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