It’s the universe as we’ve never experienced it before. The James Webb Space Telescope is sending back incredible images of deep space so advanced scientists believe it’s going to “change astronomy forever.”
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
It's not only that we can see into space and time billions of years ago. The magic is that we can see anything at all.
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
Webb, which was developed in partnership with NASA and the Canadian and European space agencies
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
Take the recent release of the Pillars of Creation which was first captured in 1995 by Hubble.
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
In the original image from the area, which is considered to be a star-making part of the galaxy, pillars of gaseous clouds that look like long fingers are reaching up to the sky.
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
What we couldn’t see before, and what is now revealed by the Webb telescope, are all the stars hidden behind the gas.
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
By picking up infrared light, Webb can see objects that are so far away, the light they emit takes over 13.5 billion years to reach Earth
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
That means Webb is also like a time machine in that it can see what the universe looked like back when the earth and sun were formed.
By- Jm Kushwaha
Image Credit -Google
“We can't see in the infrared. So there has to be some level of translation here. But we use physical meaning like true physical science in order to represent the colour,” Pagan told Global’s The New Reality