WEBVTT FILE

1
00:00:00.060 --> 00:00:04.110
(reporter) NASA is giving us a behind the scenes look at their largest and most powerful

2
00:00:04.110 --> 00:00:08.180
space telescope. Here to tell us a little bit about it is the James Webb

3
00:00:08.180 --> 00:00:12.280
Space Telescope Manager Bill Ochs, thanks for joining us.

4
00:00:12.280 --> 00:00:16.330
(Bill Ochs) Sure. (reporter) What is the James Webb Space Telescope and how is it different

5
00:00:16.330 --> 00:00:20.510
from the Hubble Space Telescope. (Bill Ochs) SO, JWST is the next

6
00:00:20.510 --> 00:00:24.610
great NASA Observatories. Two main differences with Hubble

7
00:00:24.610 --> 00:00:28.640
is we are a lot bigger than Hubble. Our primary mirror is about 7 times the size

8
00:00:28.640 --> 00:00:32.670
of Hubble mirror and we are about 3 stories high and about

9
00:00:32.670 --> 00:00:36.740
width of a tennis court. That allows us to go back and look

10
00:00:36.740 --> 00:00:40.880
at some the first stars and galaxies that were formed after the

11
00:00:40.880 --> 00:00:45.060
big bang. (reporter) Once it launches, the Webb Telescope

12
00:00:45.060 --> 00:00:49.260
will travel a million miles from Earth. How do you know it will work

13
00:00:49.260 --> 00:00:53.290
so far away? (Bill Ochs) So the key to any NASA program whether its a million miles from Earth

14
00:00:53.290 --> 00:00:57.340
or whether its in low Earth orbit, its a very rigorous test program. That is we've spent years

15
00:00:57.340 --> 00:01:01.440
developing on JWST, whether it's working or doing testing we do here at Goddard

16
00:01:01.440 --> 00:01:05.540
or whether it's down in Texas, where we do some of our cryogenic testing

17
00:01:05.540 --> 00:01:09.650
out in Northrop Grumman, out in California were we put our final pieces together.

18
00:01:09.650 --> 00:01:13.720
the test program we have looks at every aspects of the telescope to make sure it works.

19
00:01:13.720 --> 00:01:17.790
(reporter) Webb is the largest telescope ever built

20
00:01:17.790 --> 00:01:21.850
How do you build a 3 story tall telescope on Earth, for what

21
00:01:21.850 --> 00:01:25.970
it will encounter in space? (Bill Ochs) So the best way to do it is to start with small pieces

22
00:01:25.970 --> 00:01:29.980
and you start testing at the smallest piece and build it up, so what have seen behind

23
00:01:29.980 --> 00:01:34.160
me and looking in our cleanroom is the completed telescope

24
00:01:34.160 --> 00:01:38.390
integrated with our four instruments, and what we are doing right now is checking

25
00:01:38.390 --> 00:01:42.470
out the optics on it to make sure they are okay, after we've gone through environmental testing

26
00:01:42.470 --> 00:01:46.520
and the environmental testing we did is to simulate the most violent environment

27
00:01:46.520 --> 00:01:50.580
it will see, which is the rocket ride, so right now we are making sure everything

28
00:01:50.580 --> 00:01:54.670
works after that. Then we will be actually done here at Goddard and ready to ship down to

29
00:01:54.670 --> 00:01:58.830
Johnson Space Center. (reporter) NASA recently discovered 7

30
00:01:58.830 --> 00:02:03.010
Earth size planets orbiting a nearby star, will Webb study these planets?

31
00:02:03.010 --> 00:02:07.050
(Bill Ochs) Yes, one of the things we will do, we will look at all the different planets, or many

32
00:02:07.050 --> 00:02:11.100
different planets that have been discovered recently. We will be able to look at the chemical

33
00:02:11.100 --> 00:02:15.140
makeup of the atmosphere of that planet, to see if really does have the basic elements to

34
00:02:15.140 --> 00:02:19.250
be able have life. (reporter) Webb is going

35
00:02:19.250 --> 00:02:23.380
to do amazing science once it's in space, what are you most excited for?

36
00:02:23.380 --> 00:02:27.560
(Bill Ochs) Probably the most exciting thing is the things we don't know, with Hubble

37
00:02:27.560 --> 00:02:31.620
it was the same way. It's really the most exciting sciences it found was the things that were never

38
00:02:31.620 --> 00:02:35.650
anticipated. Its really thinking about well what will we find that we never

39
00:02:35.650 --> 00:02:39.690
thought of before. (reporter) Where can we learn more?

40
00:02:39.690 --> 00:02:43.770
(Bill Ochs) JWST.nasa.gov (reporter) Thanks so much for

41
00:02:43.770 --> 00:02:45.565
joining us. (Bill Ochs) Thank You.

