The Gold Plating on the James Webb Space Telescope is Much Thinner than Human Hair (2024)

The date is December 25th, 2021. You may have been ripping open gifts, putting the turkey in the oven, or spending time with your family. But in Kourou, French Guiana, the James Webb Space Telescope was officially launched. This project – a telescope designed to observe and analyze astronomical phenomena using infrared radiation – was first pitched in 1996. Construction, a collaborative effort between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) began in 2004. Completion was a long time coming. In fact, the project is almost as old as me (I’m 18)!

The structure aims to capture images of the “hidden universe”. Our eyes are only able to see visible light, which has wavelengths between 380-700 nanometres while the JWST or Webb will detect wavelengths of infrared light ranging from about 600-28,500 nanometres. The hope is that it will reveal what we cannot see: births of planets and stars covered by clouds of dust, signs of life hinted at by water in other atmospheres, and the history of the universe told by light originating from soon after the Big Bang. As light travels across the universe it gets stretched by the expansion of space. So ancient visible and UV light is transformed into light of longer wavelengths – infrared – which Webb will be able to capture.

Webb is a reflecting telescope that uses 3 different-sized mirrors to allow for a wide field of view. The primary mirror is made up of 18 smaller hexagonal mirrors, which unfolded after launch to form a smooth concave structure. The secondary mirror faces the first. It is marginally off-axis and convex, like the back of a spoon. The fixed tertiary mirror is found in the middle of the primary mirror; it corrects astigmatism from the secondary mirror and directs light to a fine steering mirror, which finally sends the light to the infrared detector.

The mirrors are all made of beryllium, which is strong yet light, and can hold its shape at cryogenic (very low) temperatures. Every mirror is plated with an incredibly thin layer of gold. At about 100 nanometer thickness, it is roughly one ten-thousandth the thickness of a human hair. After shaping, correcting, and polishing of the beryllium, the gold was applied through vacuum vapour deposition. The mirrors were placed in vacuum chambers where the gold was quite literally vaporized and deposited on the surfaces. A layer of glass was then placed on top of the gold to protect it.

Why gold? This metal is extremely reflective of both visible light and other forms of radiation, particularly in the infrared range. The gold coating optimizes the function of these mirrors. Our basic silver and aluminum mirrors here on Earth reflect 85-95% of infrared light, whereas gold reflects 99%. Gold is also relatively un-reactive, so it won’t tarnish easily.

Although the Webb mirrors are rather large (the primary mirror has a total diameter of approximately 6.5 m), the thin gold layer weighs in at a mere 48.25 g. If you brought this amount of gold into a pawn shop, you’d be walking out with around $3,600 -- a very small fraction of the total cost of this project which is around $10 billion USD.

What does Webb have to show for this large outlay? Check out these images(produced this week)for yourself.

@HalehCohn

Haleh Cohn just finished her first year at McGill University and is interested in the health sciences.

The Gold Plating on the James Webb Space Telescope is Much Thinner than Human Hair (2024)

FAQs

The Gold Plating on the James Webb Space Telescope is Much Thinner than Human Hair? ›

Webb's mirrors are covered in gold

How thin is the gold on the James Webb telescope? ›

Mass of a single primary mirror segment: 20.1 kg for a single beryllium mirror, 39.48 kg for one entire primary mirror segment assembly (PMSA). Gold coating: Thickness of gold coating = 100 x 10-9 meters (1000 angstroms).

What are the gold plates on the James Webb telescope? ›

Gold Coating

Once a mirror segment's final shape is corrected for any imaging effects due to cold temperatures, and polishing is complete, a thin coating of gold is applied. Gold improves the mirror's reflection of infrared light.

Why is James Webb coated in gold? ›

Why gold? This metal is extremely reflective of both visible light and other forms of radiation, particularly in the infrared range. The gold coating optimizes the function of these mirrors. Our basic silver and aluminum mirrors here on Earth reflect 85-95% of infrared light, whereas gold reflects 99%.

How is the James Webb telescope different from the human eye? ›

JWST is 1000 times wider than the human eye so JWST makes images about 1000 times sharper than the human eye. You can compare the resolution of your eye to that of a telescope by examining the stars in the Pleiades star cluster. The Pleiades cluster is about 2 degrees across.

Why is James Webb yellow? ›

According to NASA's Elements of the Webb series, there are a couple of metals that do an exceptional job at reflecting infrared light. Aluminum reflects 85%, silver up to 95%, and gold up to 99%.

Has the James Webb telescope looked at a black hole? ›

Two teams of researchers studying a galaxy through NASA's James Webb Space Telescope have made multiple discoveries, including spotting the most distant active supermassive black hole ever found.

Was the James Webb telescope damaged? ›

The $10 billion James Webb space telescope has been permanently damaged.

Why is James Webb telescope so expensive? ›

The James Webb Space Telescope took more than two decades and $10 billion to build. It's one of NASA's most expensive science projects. A combination of difficult engineering and mismanagement led to cost overruns and delays.

How much did James Webb mirror cost? ›

NASA has put the 18th and final piece of the puzzle into place for the $8.8 billion James Webb Space Telescope's primary mirror – marking a major milestone on the way to the observatory's launch in 2018. The 21.3-foot-wide mirror is so big it couldn't be fabricated in one piece.

Are the colors in James Webb photos real? ›

The photos are delivered in black-and-white depictions of those wavelengths of light. Engineers then assigned a visible color to each of the wavelengths of infrared light captured by the telescope and used that information to make the rich, colorful composite images, Forbes explained.

Is James Webb false color? ›

The colors in JWST's images may not be "real," but don't get the wrong idea — the colors aren't meant to trick you, and they aren't chosen only to look good. The images are intended to communicate as clearly as possible what JWST can see — and what our eyes can't.

Are the James Webb pictures real? ›

Koekemoer, A. Pagan (STScI). Given the drama of the James Webb Space Telescope's images, it's only natural to question whether what we are seeing is real. I can answer most emphatically that everything you see in the images from Webb is 100% real!

Who owns the James Webb telescope? ›

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is NASA's infrared flagship observatory. JWST is an international collaboration between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA), and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

Why can James Webb telescope see the past? ›

The longer wavelengths enable Webb to look further back in time to see the first galaxies that formed in the early universe, and to peer inside dust clouds where stars and planetary systems are forming today.

How much gold is in an average satellite? ›

A satellite will typically consume 1 to 3 ounces of gold plating. The gold plating is usually used on the antennae, solar panels, and other components that are exposed to the vacuum and extreme temperatures of space.

How thick is the James Webb sunshield? ›

Each layer of the sunshield is incredibly thin. Layer 1 faces the sun and is only 0.05 millimeters (0.002 inches) thick, while the other four layers are 0.025 mm (0.001 inches). The thickness of the aluminum and silicon coatings are even smaller.

How big are the sensors on the James Webb telescope? ›

Webb uses two different types of detectors: mercury-cadmium-telluride (abbreviated HgCdTe) "H2RG" detectors for the 0.6-5 μm "near-infrared" and arsenic doped silicon (abbreviated Si:As) detectors for the 5-28 μm "mid-infrared".

What are JWST mirrors coated with? ›

Protected gold was selected as the coating for the JWST telescope mirrors.

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