The James Webb Space Telescope is one step closer to finishing the deployment of its massive sunshield.
On Wednesday (Dec. 29), the huge new space observatory successfully extended its deployable tower assembly (DTA), a 48-inch-long (1.2 meters) shaft that connects the telescope’s two halves, NASA officials said in a statement.
The James Webb Space Telescope‘s DTA creates necessary space between the part of the telescope that houses its enormous mirror and scientific instruments and the spacecraft bus, which houses its electronics and propulsion systems.
“This creates enough distance to allow the sensitive mirrors and instruments to cool down to the necessary temperatures to detect infrared light,” NASA said in the statement. “This gap will also provide room for the sunshield membranes to fully unfold.”
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NASA engineers began beaming up commands for the Webb telescope to begin extending the DTA at approximately 9:45 a.m. EST (1445 GMT) on Wednesday. The whole process took six hours and 39 minutes, wrapping up at 4:24 p.m. EST (2124 GMT), NASA said in the statement.
The James Webb Space Telescope launched Dec. 25 and is currently on a 29-day journey to its destination: a gravitationally stable point 930,000 miles (1.5 million kilometers) away from Earth known as Lagrange Point 2, or L2. It began to deploy its enormous sunshield on Tuesday (Dec. 28), a process that is expected to take about five days.
The five-layer sunshield will help keep Webb’s instruments and optics cool, a necessity for the observatory, which is optimized to view the cosmos in infrared light.
With the DTA now fully extended, Webb’s next steps will be to release the sunshield cover and the aft momentum flap, which will “help offset some of the solar pressure that impinges on the large sunshield,” NASA said in a description of the deployment process. Webb is expected to complete both of these steps on Thursday (Dec. 30), after which is can begin unfolding its sunshield on Friday (Dec. 31).
Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her on Twitter @hannekescience. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.