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Discovery

The James Webb Space Telescope

Discovery

BBC

Science

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 December 2021

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope is only days away. Scheduled for lift off on 22 December, the largest and most complex space observatory ever built will be sent to an orbit beyond the moon.

James Webb is so huge that it has had to be folded up to fit in the rocket. There will be a tense two weeks over Christmas and the New Year as the space giant unfurls and unfolds. Its design and construction has taken about 30 years under the leadership of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

With its huge 6.5 metre-wide primary mirror, the giant observatory promises to extend our view across the cosmos to the first stars to shine in the early universe. That’s a vista of Cosmic Dawn: the first small clusters of stars to form and ignite out of what had been a universe of just dark clouds of primordial gas. If the James Webb succeeds in capturing the birth of starlight, we will be looking at celestial objects more than 13.5 billion light years away.

Closer to home, the telescope will also revolutionise our understanding of planets orbiting stars beyond the solar system.

BBC science correspondent Jonathan Amos reports from the European Space Agency’s launch site in French Guyana from where James Webb will be sent into space. He talks to astronomers who will be using the telescope and NASA engineers who’ve built the telescope and tested it in the years leading to launch.

Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker Picture: James Webb Space Telescope, Credit Northrup Grumman

Transcript

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0:00.0

Before you listen to this BBC podcast, I'd like to tell you why I love podcasting.

0:04.3

I'm Sasha Johansson, I'm an Assistant Commissioner for the BBC and I work on making podcasts.

0:11.1

My real passion is discovering unbelievable unheard stories and working with the biggest

0:16.8

stars who can really bring those stories to life.

0:20.0

I love the whole process of making podcasts from the spark of an idea to hearing the final

0:25.9

edit.

0:26.9

There's nothing like it.

0:27.9

What makes BBC podcast special is that we're working for you, so whatever we commission

0:32.6

has to reflect the things that you care about and love, wherever you are in the UK.

0:37.0

So if you like this BBC podcast, there's so much more to discover.

0:40.6

Have a listen on BBC Sounds.

0:44.9

Just one or two more steps and I'll be there.

0:48.8

It's not every day.

0:49.8

You get to venture into the South American jungle, I'm bang on the equator, it's hot, it's

0:55.5

sticky.

0:56.5

And there's this constant chirping and chattering from the tropical birds and insects.

1:01.5

But I'm here to witness important work because we're just days now from the launch of by

1:07.1

far the largest and most sophisticated telescope ever to be sent into space.

1:12.3

And I'm standing fully atop the launch pad where a rocket will leave Earth to hurl this

1:17.2

remarkable observatory into orbit.

1:19.7

I'm Jonathan Amos and you're listening to a special edition of Discovery on the BBC.

1:25.2

We're going to be talking about one of the grand scientific projects of the 21st century.

...

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