The James Web Telescope Has Arrived in French Guiana

After 20 years of development and $10 billion in costs, we have finally lived to see the day. The big space James Web telescope has arrived in French Guiana. From there it will take off, carried by the Ariane 5 rocket. The launch will not be on October 31, as it was first announced, but on December 18, 2021.

Details of Transportation

 

The James Web telescope traveled by boat from California (Northrop Gruman, Redondo Beach) to French Guiana. Due to its size, it could not fit in any plane. The land route was also not possible due to the Darien rift that exists between North and South America.

Even if it did not exist, the bridges on the road would not withstand the weight, and also because of the potential dangers on the road. There was also danger on the sea route – pirates from the Caribbean. It is not about pirates hijacking and launching a telescope and conducting their observations and research, but rather about potentially damaging it, demanding a ransom, postponing launches, and so on. Therefore, a ship that regularly travels to French Guiana was used for transport, plus the details of where the ship is located were kept secret during the trip.

Under The Veil of Mystery

 

Before the trip, the telescope was placed in a special protective container with a clean atmosphere. It was transported during the night by a security truck to a port 26 miles away, where the heavy apparatus was carefully loaded into the ship MN Colibri.

The ship then transported it to the port of Kourou in French Guiana, where the Space Center is located.

The Timeline

In front of the staff at the Space Center, there is a big job of carefully loading the packed telescope into the top of the rocket. Let’s look at important temporal events leading up to this moment:

  • During 2020, in two separate Ariane launches, there were levels of vibration when opening the saturated covers under which the heavy load is located. This is not allowed in the case of the James Web Telescope, and work was done to solve this problem.
  • 2021 the Ariane team said the problem had been resolved, although there was no official explanation as to what was at stake.
  • On July 30th, 2021, a launch was performed which confirmed that a solution had been found to reduce vibration.
  • As an additional confirmation another launch will take place on October 22nd, 2021, to carry commercial satellites and a French military communications satellite.

The stages include: the launch, then the flight to the 1.5 million km distant Lagrange point, and about 150 mechanical phases that will be done there so that the telescope will be developed into its fully working form.

We will have to wait until December 18th, 2021. to see if everything will go according to plan.

Nevena Glogovac Writer at Online Star Register

Glogovac Nevena-Nancy is a geodesy & geoinformatics engineer by trade and a wordsmith at heart. By holding onto fate’s rocky learning curve and her natural flair for the extraordinary, the worlds of science and creativity melted and unified into a singular path. Moreover, having been born on the same soil as the geniuses Nikola Tesla, Mihajlo Pupin and Milutin Milankovic provided an educational basis for Nevena to continue the voyages they had begun. Led simply by the curious need to discover more. A small but meaningful contribution to this personal endeavor has been joining forces with the visionary OSR team, where astrology and astronomy go back to their common roots, so 'If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.'