James Webb Space Telescope

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope unvield the first deepest view of our Universe.

James Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeJames Webb Space TelescopeThe first image from NASA’s new space telescope unveiled on Monday, 11 June 2022. The view of our Universe is expanded, it is deepest view of the cosmos and galaxies ever captured. At first glance, the first image from NASA’s new James Webb Space telescope may not seem remarkable but in reality, the tiny specks in space which appears are actually galaxies, billions of year old.

President Joe Biden has released one of the Webb’s first image and it is the deepest view of the universe.
The image shows SMACS 0723, where massive group of galaxy cluster act as magnifying glass for the object behind them. Gravitational lensing created a Webb’s first deepest view of universe includes old, giant and distant galaxy.

This presentation was occured at the White House during a preview event with NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. According to Nelson, “It is deepest image of our Universe that has ever been taken.”
Many of the distant galaxy clusters have never been seen before.

President Joe Biden called this Monday’s reveal “a historic Day”.
“Webb was built to find the first generation of galaxies that formed after the Big Bang,” says Jane Rigby, operation project scientist for the telescope. “That is the core science goal it was built to do”.

According to NASA’s release, “This slice of the vast universe covers a patch of sky approximately the size of grain of sand held at arm’s length by someone on the ground.”

The image taken by Webb’s Near infrared camera which take images at different wavelengths. Nasa administrator Bill Nelson told the reporter last month in brief, ” We are goin going to give humanity a new view of the cosmos. And it is the view that have never seen before.”

Image that has taken on Monday include a view of giant gaseous planet outside our solar system, two images of nebula where stars are born and die and clusters of galaxies which were dancing around each other.

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