There are currently no real science observation projects working on the telescope. Instead, the final tuning and various tests are performed. However, the engineers in charge have now been able to report that the alignment phase of configuring individual devices has officially been completed.
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Images for different recording systems This means that different recording optics can demonstrate their ability to provide sharp images of target objects. As evidence of this, the operators posted corresponding images from different systems on the telescope, which show that all individual components can provide good images.
James Webb Telescope: Alignment completed
More tests will follow
That this is not an issue of course will be familiar to many since the inception of the Hubble telescope. The tool initially provided blurry images after booting. It took a complex space shuttle mission to fix the problem in the telescope mirror by putting glasses on the system, so to speak. This will not be possible with the new telescope because it is too far from Earth.
The repair isn’t necessary anyway, as it now appears. Illustrations of the Large Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy near our Milky Way, show that James Webb can provide excellent images. More tests will be done in the near future. Final scientific instruments are now being examined and tested to see if the entire system remains constant in temperature when rotating to new targets. It will be a few months before the first regular monitoring projects begin.
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