There is something mystical and mythical about looking up into the sheer endless depths of space. If you think about what is sparkling in the firmament, you can hardly avoid asking the big questions. How did all of this develop? Where do we come from? Is there anybody else out there?
On the one hand, you can feel quite small in the face of the dimensions of the Universe – a tiny speck of dust on a tiny blue planet. On the other hand, the starry sky makes you realize how extraordinary our Earth and life are. Around us great darkness, everything seems quiet. But every now and then shooting stars pass by and remind us that something is happening in the sky. Because in fact, everything is moving and evolving. An unparalleled scientific mission was launched this year to explore these cosmic dynamics and find new answers to unexplained astronomical questions: the James Webb Space Telescope is without doubt the largest and most advanced instrument ever sent into space – by far.
New view of the young universe
The telescope took up operations in July 2022 at a distance of about 1.5 million kilometres from Earth. The very first images provided the deepest and most detailed views of space ever seen. It is a glimpse into the past, into the times of the first stars and galaxies more than 13 billion years ago. One innovation of the James Webb Telescope is the detection of infrared light.
James Webb - James Webb became head of NASA in 1961 under President John F. Kennedy. In his eight years at the helm of the US aerospace agency, Webb advanced many scientific missions to explore the planetary system, including the famous Apollo moon landing.
“This makes it possible, on the one hand, to look particularly deep into space and to look particularly far back in time,” said Dr Markus Röllig from the Institute for Astrophysics. The further one looks out into space, the longer the light has travelled – and the older it is.