James Webb Space Telescope

Started by Lord Lucien5 pages

Originally posted by Patient_Leech
Which one is that, is that the asteroid mission?
The Artemis program is NASA's return to the Moon. Artemis 1 is set for launch this year to do an unmanned flyby of the Moon, and Artemis 2 launches a manned flyby in 2024.

Originally posted by ArtificialGlory
Umm, no, it's actually an Ion Cannon deployed by a secret military division of the UN, known as the Global Defense Initiative. It's going to be used to destroy any resistance to the coming NWO.
Kane lives in death

Webb Telescope May Find Intelligent Life Via Its Pollution Signatures on Distant Planets, Study Suggests

Air, water, light, noise, radiation, and so on — humanity’s overall presence and impact can be seen and felt through our pollution signatures across the globe, and even from space. Therefore, if intelligent aliens were to remotely look for signs of life on our planet, they may not have to search too hard and close to sense our existence. -snip

Want to find intelligence on other planets? Look for their filth.

Originally posted by Robtard
Webb Telescope May Find Intelligent Life Via Its Pollution Signatures on Distant Planets, Study Suggests

Air, water, light, noise, radiation, and so on — humanity’s overall presence and impact can be seen and felt through our pollution signatures across the globe, and even from space. Therefore, if intelligent aliens were to remotely look for signs of life on our planet, they may not have to search too hard and close to sense our existence. -snip

Want to find intelligence on other planets? Look for their filth.

😂

NASA Teases Extraordinary Images Captured by James Webb

kinda wish i didn't read that. would rather have been surprised in 2 weeks

First official image revealed. I think there is much more to come tomorrow...

https://www.nasa.gov/webbfirstimages

Was hoping for higher res

Originally posted by Patient_Leech
First official image revealed. I think there is much more to come tomorrow...

https://www.nasa.gov/webbfirstimages

Looks cool.

Originally posted by Bashar Teg
Was hoping for higher res

https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/038/01G7JGTH21B5GN9VCYAHBXKSD1

appreciate the link, but 4k in this context is a bit weak IMHO. I was hoping for at least 8k. Thought they might indulge us with another ludicrous option like 16k

I'm assuming the galaxies in the background happened billions of years after those bright explosions in the foreground.

Originally posted by Blakemore
I'm assuming the galaxies in the background happened billions of years after those bright explosions in the foreground.

Wut?

Isn't this supposed to be a picture of the earliest point in the universe we can possibly see?

Isn't 4537 x 4630 a hell of a lot more than 4k?

Anyway, it's an amazing image, some nice warping effects, some space-time-gravitation thing going on there?

But we basically already knew there was a shit ton of galaxies floating around out there...

So I wonder if there are any major new discoveries coming today..

Well we have a solar system bubble 🫧 so we might find light that is young and can notch with the beginning to explain light better.

Fortune

Then an interstellar nursery can be found in giant stars type of knowledge can be better indoctrinated. The size can fit constellations and lift the mood so that Cetus can be a sign for life. Then you can have communication that is promising and discovery 💡 can employ.

Originally posted by Blakemore
Isn't this supposed to be a picture of the earliest point in the universe we can possibly see?

1. The "explosions" in the foreground aren't explosions. They are diffraction spikes caused by the set up and shape of the telescope. They are stars in our own galaxy

2. The galaxies in the background happened before the the stars in the foreground. Their light takes a lot longer to reach us.

Originally posted by jaden_2.0
1. The "explosions" in the foreground aren't explosions. They are diffraction spikes caused by the set up and shape of the telescope. They are stars in our own galaxy

2. The galaxies in the background happened before the the stars in the foreground. Their light takes a lot longer to reach us.

Ah, got ya.

Originally posted by Patient_Leech
Isn't 4537 x 4630 a hell of a lot more than 4k?

Anyway, it's an amazing image, some nice warping effects, some space-time-gravitation thing going on there?

But we basically already knew there was a shit ton of galaxies floating around out there...

So I wonder if there are any major new discoveries coming today..

slightly more. It's about 4.6k

Looks like giant space amoebas