Nasa and the
European
Space Agency (ESA) have agreed to work hand in hand on two major forthcoming
projects.
The two agencies signed agreements on the
James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and the
Laser
Interferometer Space Antenna (Lisa) Pathfinder mission during a ceremony at
the
Paris
Airshow in Le Bourget.
JWST involves international cooperation between Nasa, ESA and the
Canadian
Space Agency to investigate the origin and evolution of galaxies, stars and
planetary systems.
Although the new space telescope is designed to operate over a different
range of wavelengths, it is considered as the successor to Hubble. JWST is due
to launch in 2013 and will operate for at least five years.
Four sophisticated instruments, including a fine guidance sensor for
precision pointing, will combine greatly enhanced imaging capability at visible
and infrared wavelengths.
JWST will also offer spectroscopic modes to learn more about the chemistry
and evolution of the objects populating our universe.
The telescope will be located well outside Earth's atmosphere at a point in
deep space called the
second
Lagrangian point at 1.5 million kilometres in the opposite direction to the
Sun.
From this location, the powerful space observatory promises to revolutionise
our view of the cosmos yet again, just as Hubble did.
Nasa will have overall responsibility for the management and operation of the
JWST mission, and will build the spacecraft, telescope and the platform that
will host the instruments. ESA will provide the launch with an Ariane 5 ECA
rocket.
Nasa will also provide one major instrument, the Near-Infrared Camera via the
University of Arizona, and ESA will provide the Near-Infrared spectrograph
operating over similar wavelengths.
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