NASA and ESA announced today that the James Webb Space Telescope has cleared one of the final hurdles before launch. The telescope passed the final launch readiness review, meaning that all the hardware and software for the spacecraft and the Ariane 5 rocket are ready for flight. This officially greenlights the liftoff, planned for December 24.
Additionally, NASA said the Webb teams recently completed a comprehensive day of launch rehearsal. This involved the launch site crews in French Guiana, and Webb’s Mission Operations Center (MOC) at the Space Telescope and Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
“The various teams involved with launching Webb are all standing at the ready, and have practiced each step routinely,” NASA said.
However, the launch on the 24th is not a given. One potential issue facing the tropical launch site is weather. A current forecast for high altitude winds could force a delay. As is the case with all launches, any weather delay might be a last-minute decision.
Rollout to the launchpad is currently scheduled for December 22.
On December 17, the Ariane 5 rocket fairing was closed around the James Webb Space Telescope. This protective fairing, or ‘nose cone’, will shield the telescope during liftoff and its journey through the atmosphere on December 24. Credit: ESA
As of now, the Webb telescope is all tucked into the rocket fairing and securely attached atop the Ariane 5. ESA said putting the fairing around the telescope was a delicate operation, assisted by a laser guiding system, because the margins between the folded-up observatory (4.5 m wide) and the rocket fairing (5.4 m wide) are small.
Now, for its last days on Earth kept at specialized environmental conditions inside the fairing that keep the observatory in a perfectly controlled temperature and humidity ranges.
Watch how JWST is encapsulated inside the rocket fairing.Besides the weather, the telescope must clear one final health before launch. Once the rocket is on the launchpad, technicians will conduct final electrical and software configurations, ensuring everything is a go. Then, just 20 minutes before liftoff is when the telescope will be switched to internal battery power. If the battery systems are working, at roughly 15 minutes prior to launch, the mission will be fully cleared for flight.
Here’s an animation of what the launch will be like:
For everyone who has been anticipating this mission and its launch, clearing the final launch readiness review is a huge relief. The often delayed, much anticipated mission will reveal insights about all phases of cosmic history, looking back to the universe’s first stars and galaxies, searching for signs of potential habitability among the thousands of exoplanets that have been discovered in recent years, as well as zooming in on objects in our own Solar System.
Lead image caption: Illustration of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Credits: NASA