Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
Another new video about Webb from Launch Pad Astronomy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cUp0AEwV2w
I highly recommend this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cUp0AEwV2w
I highly recommend this one.
Another new video about Webb from Launch Pad Astronomy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cUp0AEwV2w
I highly recommend this one.
So, if I get this right, they launched it knowing the actuators in two (I think) of the mirrors weren't working properly, but they had a workaround and it would have been too time consuming to switch them out?
Not sure what you mean. Two of the actuator assemblies are of a different design (A3 and A6).
Wow. Here I had thought it was a design choice or design constraint. I guess they determined that it wasn't a mission-critical problem and could be worked around. I hope they're right.
Nope. 3point14 has it right. A3 and A6 are the same design as the other segments, but they have a fault which means their data has to be read differently
Warning 4.4mb pdf
https://authors.library.caltech.edu/91565/1/1069808.pdf
Section 1.2 Describes the operation
Section 2:4:2 Para 2 Describes the problem.
Essentially, there are a couple of defective linear variable differential transformers (LVDT) on the position sensors of mirror segments A3 and A6. Each LVDT has two coils to cancel out differential thermal effects. On A3 and A6, one of the two coils on each LVDT is faulty.
The engineers had to work out a way of getting accurate readouts using only one coil in each LVDT. So they developed a different readout procedure that could use only the one good coil in each LVDT."
Even though this was discovered back in 2018, it would have put a huge delay on the whole mission because the mirror would have to be disassembled to get the the components to be replaced (remember in 2018 they were very close to what they thought was their launch date).
I hope those NASA engineers remembered to wax their slide rules!
https://jwst.nasa.gov/content/webbLaunch/whereIsWebb.html?units=metric
99.7% there. The remaining distance is less than the distance from New York to London, or from Auckland to Perth.
I hope those NASA engineers remembered to wax their slide rules!
Is that a euphemism?![]()
More of an anachronism, I think. I still have a lovely bamboo one. It's self lubricating and runs so smooth. I'd go to exams with two of them, the bamboo for most things and a plastic one for scales it didn't have.

I think the actual answer is because NASA wants to play with their new toy first, before handing it over to the astronomers. (I'm only half joking.)
But they did say, if memory serves, six months before we get science images. Not necessarily six months before it is fully operational.
Please don't **** on NASA with this crap. First access to data and first publication rights are well understood and properly agreed by the funding agencies well ahead of time.