James Webb Space Telescope

Overview

The James Webb Space Telescope is a $10B telescope launched by NASA in 2021 that captures infrared light from across the universe. As of 2025, it is the largest space telescope, able to detect light from the earliest observable moments of the universe about 13.5 billion years ago.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Published photography from JWST are false-color images

    The James Webb Telescope captures invisible light, not photos. Scientists then color-map wavelengths of infrared light to show us the invisible universe.

  • Lagrange points offer energy-efficient orbits for telescopes

    Lagrange Points are special locations where gravitational forces let spacecraft "park" without constant course corrections, making them ideal for science missions. NASA’s James Webb Telescope uses Lagrange Point 2 to stay aligned with Earth while orbiting the Sun.

  • Infrared vision gives Webb telescope access to the oldest light in the universe

    To peer into the universe’s earliest moments, the Webb had to solve several immense engineering challenges: deploying a massive sun shield, surviving extreme cold, and stabilizing ultra-sensitive instruments. The telescope’s mirrors can adjust themselves in steps 10,000 times smaller than a human hair.

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