

NASA HIDES HOW TO
Now, one of the things that NASA is researching right now is how to actually alleviate a bad collision. The day you have all the scientists buy up all the great wine and max out their credit cards and disappear then you might want to worry, but even that's not how we work, we are people, and if we knew something dangerous was coming there would be no way for us to hide it. I was sitting at my desk at NASA and somebody asked me the question, "Is the world going to end next week?" And I thought about that because, of course, we knew that the world was not going to end, there was nothing happening astronomically that we could tell, but I realized this person didn't think of me as an actual human being – that if I knew the world was going to end in a week I would be at work at my desk. I remember back, I think it was in 2012, there was this idea that the Mayan apocalypse was going to come, that the world was going to end, it was all over the news and I actually got a phone call from somebody. So one of the things that I find very difficult as a scientist is people often ask the question: "Would scientists tell us if something really bad was about to happen?" And you think about that sentence and you have to ask the question: Who is the "us" here? Am I not part of "us"? The other thing is that the sky is available to anybody on the Earth – no one government owns the sky, there are telescopes everywhere on the planet there's no way that anybody could hide the fact that some big asteroid was on a course with the Earth. We actually study the sky every night we're looking for objects that might be on a collision course with Earth and if we find anything that even looks risky we inform lots of people. NASA plans to launch JWST with the Ariane 5 rocket in Guiana, a French province in South America, in October 2018.MICHELLE THALLER: Anthony, I often get asked this question: If scientists actually knew that there was an impending catastrophic collision, some asteroid was heading towards Earth, would they tell you? And the answer is yes. Scientists describe JWST as an "infrared time super machine", which helps look back 13.5 billion years to observe the first stars and galaxies formed in the darkness of the early universe. The gold-plated layer helps to increase the level of infrared light reflection of the main mirror.

JWST's main mirror surface has a diameter of 6.5m, including 19 smaller hexagonal mirrors made from gold-plated beryllium (Be) material. JWST is the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. On the mirror, the secondary mirror functions to receive light from the primary mirror for optical adjustment, " said NASA Chandler, NASA's representative of the JWST project, told Business Insider.

The blurred image is a secondary mirror support structure of the telescope, including details.

The US government must respect the intellectual property rights of industrial partners. However, in the video, part of JWST's image is obscured so that viewers cannot see it clearly. technology has never existed, " NASA said. Before building JWST, we have to create and complete 10 jobs. "The efforts of thousands of people across the United States, Canada and Europe in nearly two decades have finally reached this milestone. Lightweight structure and modern sensors and many other things. To celebrate this special day, NASA's Goddard Space Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, USA, released a video on Youtube about revolutionary technologies in making telescopes, including profiles. NASA announced the completion of the huge gold mirror surface of James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) worth $ 8.7 billion on November 2. Part of the structure of the James Webb Space Telescope is blurred (the circle is red).(Photo: NASA). The US Aerospace Agency (NASA) blurs a section on the James Webb Space Telescope because it is the exclusive structure of an anonymous partner company, according to Business Insider. NASA deliberately blurred a part of the structure of the James Webb Space Telescope in the video about this telescope.
