JWST is like a super-powered camera that can look back in time to see what the universe looked like when it was just a baby.
Imagine you're standing on a dark road at night, and you see a car’s headlights coming from far away. The farther away the car is, the earlier you see it, like looking into the past. That's how space telescopes work. They catch light that has been traveling through space for millions or even billions of years.
How JWST works
JWST uses a special kind of light called infrared, think of it as heat you can see. When we look at distant stars and galaxies, their light gets stretched out like a rubber band while traveling through the universe, turning visible light into infrared. JWST is designed to catch that stretched-out light, letting us see objects that are super far away.
Also, JWST has big mirrors, like giant reflectors, that gather more light than your eyes can. It's like having a flashlight with the power of thousands of tiny flashlights all working together, so even the faintest baby stars in the early universe shine bright for us to see.
Examples
- A space telescope like JWST captures light that has traveled for billions of years, showing us what the universe looked like in its early days.
- Imagine a camera that takes pictures from so far away, you can see stars as they were when the universe was just a baby.
- JWST sees light from very old galaxies, helping scientists understand how the universe began.
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See also
- How does the James Webb Space Telescope see the early universe?
- How does the new James Webb Space Telescope capture such detailed images?
- How Did the First Stars Form in the Early Universe?
- What are primordial remnants?
- What challenges does the James Webb Space Telescope face observing early galaxies?