MIRI, ( Mid InfraRed Instrument ), during ambient temperature alignment testing in RAL Space's clean rooms. Image Credit: STFC/RAL Space
Our friend Will Gater from the BBC’s Sky At Night Magazine had the chance to get a behind-the-scenes tour of the facility that is building the Mid-Infrared Instrument on the long-awaited James Webb Space Telescope. You’ll meet MIRI inside clean room at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK, before it is packaged up and sent over to NASA Goddard in the US. You’ll also hear from some of the scientists involved in the project.
MIRI is expected to make important contributions to all four of the primary science themes for JWST: 1.) discovery of the “first light”; 2.) assembly of galaxies: history of star formation, growth of black holes, production of heavy elements; 3.) how stars and planetary systems form; and 4.) evolution of planetary systems and conditions for life.
Lead image caption: MIRI, ( Mid InfraRed Instrument ), during ambient temperature alignment testing in RAL Space’s clean rooms. Image Credit: STFC/RAL Space
The ongoing saga of the New Horizons mission—will it get truncated and its science team…
The supermassive black hole at the heart of M87 was the target of the Event…
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are some of the most violent events in the universe. Some have…
Technicians at Berkeley Lab are building an experiment that will conduct radio astronomy on the…
A recent study examines how the Earth was hit by blasts from supernovae (plural form…
Barnard's Star is the second closest star system to Earth, at a distance of 5.96…