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NASA's Webb sunshield undergoes rocket fitting, more testing by Rob Gutro for GSFC News Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jun 13, 2019
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope's spacecraft element, which consists of the observatory's spacecraft bus and the sunshield, was put in the same folded-up configuration that it will be in when mounted on atop a rocket for launch in 2021. Since Webb is too large to fit inside a rocket in its "deployed," or operational, form, it will be tested in its folded-up, or "stowed," launch configuration that takes up less space. Webb's enormous sunshield has to be elaborately folded and secured to both fit in the rocket's nose cone and be strong enough to survive the ride into space. In the two weeks after launch, the entire observatory will undergo a highly choreographed transformation-unfurling, extending and expanding to a configuration that is very different to how it looks when stored inside the rocket for liftoff. In the photo, taken in the clean room at Northrop Grumman Corporation in Redondo Beach, the last sunshield stowing step for the spacecraft element was completed, after engineers rotated the aft Unitized Pallet Structure (UPS) in a full upward position and locked it. There are two UPSs-a forward and an aft one; the aft UPS is the longer one-seen on the right in this view. All five expansive sunshield membranes are folded up and pinned flat to the UPSs. The big silver truss-like structure in between the two UPSs is a structural substitute for the flight telescope element, which has already been tested separately. In the stowed configuration, the spacecraft element was transported on a giant dolly from the clean room to test facilities in other buildings at Northrop Grumman where it will be subjected to environmental testing. Once it passes those tests, the next big thing is to return the spacecraft element to the clean room and deploy, inspect and verify that it got through those flight environment tests successfully. Once operational, the James Webb Space Telescope will be the world's premier space science observatory. Webb will solve mysteries of our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international project led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency.
How the Webb Telescope Will Explore Mars Washington DC (SPX) Jun 06, 2019 In the summer of 2018, a dust storm blanketed the entire planet Mars. From the surface, the Sun would have looked like tiny orb in a murky brown sky. Dust carpeted the solar panels of NASA's intrepid Opportunity rover, which would not recover after it lost power. Orbiting spacecraft and the Curiosity rover monitored the storm from their respective vantage points, but none of these robotic explorers had a view wide enough to see the entire planet at once. When NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, lau ... read more
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