Webb Telescope Faces 5-8 Month Launch Setback
HOUSTON-The planned launch of NASA's $8.8 billion
James Webb Space Telescope is slipping from October 2018 to between March and
June of 2019 to accommodate further hardware integration and pre-mission
preparations, the space agency announced Sept. 28.
JWST's five- to
10-year mission to seek out the earliest, most distant galaxies and search the
atmospheres of extrasolar planets for signs of biomarkers with the partnering
European and Canadian space agencies will kick off with an Ariane 5 launch from
Kourou, French Guiana.
NASA reassessed the launch schedule to allow for
longer-than-expected integration and testing of the spacecraft bus and tennis
court-sized Sun shield at Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, of Redondo Beach,
California, the prime contractor.
"The change in launch timing is not
indicative of hardware or technical performance concerns,'' said Thomas
Zurbuchen, the director of NASA's science mission directorate, as part of the
announcement. Rather, the integration of the various spacecraft elements is
taking longer than expected."
The observatory's existing budget remains
adequate to accommodate the change, and planned science operations will not be
jeopardized, according to NASA's update.
JWST is no stranger to setbacks.
The observatory was first conceived in 1996 as a follow-on to the now
27-year-old Hubble Space Telescope. Early cost estimates ranged from $1 billion
to $3.5 billion, with launch between 2007 and 2011, according to a previous U.S.
Government Accountability Office audit. The program achieved new stability after
reforms in 2011.
Meanwhile, the telescope hardware itself is now in a
slow warm-up phase as it emerges from a challenging thermal vacuum chamber test
at NASA's Johnson Space Center here. The testing was configured to assess how
the infrared observatory will function in temperatures of about -400F, or 33K,
at its final destination, the L-2 Sun/Earth LaGrange point about 1 million mi.
from Earth.
The massive circular door to the nearly nine-story Apollo-era
thermal vacuum chamber that surrounds the James Webb's 18-segment mirror and
integrated science module was closed on July 11. The gradual warm-up to 68F, or
293K, that got underway on Sept. 27 will permit the low-temperature vacuum
testing to reach its goal of 93 to 100 days duration by mid-October, when the
door is to be unsealed, according to Rob Gutro, a spokesman for NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, which manages JWST
development.
A day later, chamber temperatures simulating those at the
JWST's L-2 final destination had warmed to -373F, or 48.2K. Outside of the test
facility housing Johnson's Chamber A and the telescope, skies were sunny as
temperatures climbed to near 90F, high enough to continue erasing memories of
Hurricane Harvey that drenched Houston and JSC with more than 40 in. of rain
between late August and early September.
Though Johnson was forced to
close for more than a week to cope with Harvey's high water and some roof leaks,
JWST testing continued without interruption and is supplying the desired
prelaunch data, Gutro said.
The telescope hardware and components reached
Houston from Goddard by C-5 air transport on May 4, or about two months later
than planned. That setback was linked to trouble with vibration and acoustic
testing simulating the launch environment on the 21-ft.-wide mirror and science
instrument package.
When it departs Houston at the completion of the
thermal vacuum test, the telescope's comex primary mirror and science module are
to be flown to Northrop Grumman facilities in Redondo Beach, California, where
they are to be integrated with the spacecraft bus and Sun shield for further
prelaunch testing.
The latest launch delay will provide additional
environmental testing of the fully assembled observatory to ensure a thorough
evaluation, including lessons learned. Evaluations to date indicate the hardware
is meeting its required performance levels, according to the agency's Sept. 28
update.
Once final assembly and testing are complete at Northrop Grumman,
JWST is to be transported by barge to the European Space Agency's launch complex
in French Guiana.
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