James Webb Space Telescope - First Images
The first images from the James Webb telescope are out and they're spectacular. I would encourage you all to just click on the link below and go to the website and check out the original images there. See it on a desktop or a laptop or a monitor, large screen if you can. You can stare at them for hours. They are so beautiful, so gorgeous. This is the deepest and the furthest we have looked back in time
This is the first image that was actually revealed by President James Pier in yesterday officially. And this one shows it's a defeat image showing a cluster of galaxies in the center and you can see these reddish elongated galaxies which is cost elongation is caused by gravitational as lensing as Einstein had predicted. So these are lights coming from galaxies which are further behind that cluster of galaxy in the front I and some of these galaxies in the back are over 13 billion years old
This one is my favorite image. It has the James Web Telescope has captured the signature of water along with evidence of cloud and haze in the atmosphere surrounding an exoplanet that was a per 96 P which is one of more than 5000 confirmed exoplanets in the Milky Way. That means simply mindful of the fact that we can actually see the composition of the atmosphere of these planets. Just imagine what it does to kind of figuring out which planets to explore in the future and where to look for signs of life
phil spade
@Phil · 0:43
Ours. Thank you for sharing these and sharing your thoughts, because I've taken a look at these images, but I'm not really exactly sure what I'm looking at. It looks like something out of Star Wars, and I really just have no idea what I'm actually looking at. And on top of that, it's very hard to comprehend apprehend that these are billions of years old. It's just very hard to grasp
It's basically the curvature of spacetime. That's kind of what I still have predicted. And that curvature is resulting in that light from galaxies behind the ones in the foreground to get curved and stretched out. But it's coming from galaxy from the same point. And this is just a beautiful illustration of the principle of house based on stuff by gravity
Deborah Pardes
@DBPardes · 1:51
It's. First of all, thank you for posting this. I've been craving this all day and I keep on seeing it, and now I get to indulge, and I did. And Taylor, I can't agree with you more about the vastness of it and the speck of sand and the humility it brings us, but also the awe. And I want to just sit in this other emotion. I'm having mentioned this to somebody else today with regard to this post
Tanya Mahajan
@Tanya30 · 1:31
So I really liked watching all those pictures and I hope we can able to see how the Earth was formed, how the universe was created with the help of this el school
Erika Schon
@Riki · 1:41
He tries to explain to us the physics of time and the basic laws that ground us all and where the mysteries remain. And he speaks in real English in terms that I understand and I'm engrossed in this book right now. So fundamentals by Frank Wilcheck. Really nice book. And lastly, it's a schon thing. Maybe that is my last name. My son Ian just posted something very fun
Erika Schon
@Riki · 0:19
Just something fun shown. Design is doing an intergalactic series. You should check out some of these fun, Instagram and TikTok posts because he's really keyed into the beautiful, beautiful images. And thank you again, Irish, for posting. Bye