[HN Gopher] James Webb first images - complete set of high resol...
___________________________________________________________________
 
James Webb first images - complete set of high resolution shots now
live
 
Author : crhulls
Score  : 929 points
Date   : 2022-07-12 15:03 UTC (7 hours ago)
 
web link (webbtelescope.org)
w3m dump (webbtelescope.org)
 
| leeoniya wrote:
| the Southern Ring Nebula (MIRI Image) is bizarrely very low res?
| 
| https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/033/01G...
 
  | fumblebee wrote:
  | Wow you're right, huge difference in the sizes of the "full
  | res" images:
  | 
  | > MIRI: Full Res, 1306 X 1133, TIF (1.78 MB) [1]
  | 
  | > NIR Cam: Full Res, 4833 X 4501, TIF (24.06 MB) [2]
  | 
  | Maybe it's a mistake, they suggest it should offer an
  | "incredible amount of detail":                 This Mid-
  | Infrared Instrument (MIRI) image also offers an _incredible
  | amount of detail_, including a cache of distant galaxies in the
  | background.
  | 
  | [1]
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/033/01G...
  | 
  | [2]
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/033/01G...
 
    | DiogenesKynikos wrote:
    | MIRI works at longer wavelengths than NIRCam, so its angular
    | resolution is lower (longer wavelengths mean more
    | diffraction). It also has a smaller field of view.
    | 
    | Those two factors mean that it has fewer pixels per image.
 
    | TremendousJudge wrote:
    | Well, it's incredible in the sense that I can't believe it
 
  | jacquesm wrote:
  | It's the effect of the wavelength of far infrared light being
  | quite a bit longer.
  | 
  | Think of a reduction to extremes: if you have a sensor that is
  | a centimeter square and you're trying to 'catch' a wave that is
  | a meter long there is a fair chance the sensor will be bypassed
  | entirely, but if you are trying to catch millimeter waves your
  | sensor will be easily able to capture the photons.
  | 
  | The most practical example of this effect is the size of radio
  | antennae, they get longer as the wavelength gets longer.
 
| taftster wrote:
| So, am I to get this right? The universe, it's big. Like really
| big?
 
  | SapporoChris wrote:
  | Not only is the universe big, really big. Unimaginably big. You
  | are also by comparison, small, unimaginably small.
  | Infinitesimally small. Be that as it may, do the best you can.
  | 
  | Less flippantly, the number of galaxies in the images is just
  | mind boggling. I'm looking forward to seeing 3d explorable map
  | of the galaxies someday. I know it will happen if it hasn't
  | already.
 
  | hulahoof wrote:
  | I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the
  | chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.
 
| AlexFielder wrote:
| Serious question: How do I explain this to my nine year old?
 
  | 87tau wrote:
  | Unsure what you want to explain or what your nine year old
  | already knows, but generally I would start by explaining to
  | him/her/them that these are pictures of very far away and
  | enormous objects taken from a telescope that is located further
  | away than the moon.
  | 
  | The telescope takes pictures in a different frequency band,
  | like an infrared camera. These pictures are then color mapped
  | to blue, green yellow and other colors that you normally see
  | because just black and white image are boring to look at.
 
  | sbierwagen wrote:
  | Explain what? There's a telescope in space?
 
| mparnisari wrote:
| I have no idea what i'm looking at or how much effort this took
| but it looks gorgeous and it's my new desktop background.
 
| dang wrote:
| Recent and related:
| 
|  _James Webb Telescope First Images - Livestream_ -
| https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32070531 - July 2022 (8
| comments)
| 
|  _Deepest infrared image of universe_ -
| https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32062849 - July 2022 (334
| comments)
| 
|  _James Webb Space Telescope White House Briefing_ -
| https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32062139 - July 2022 (91
| comments)
 
| tpae wrote:
| What is that brightest light?
 
| quickthrower2 wrote:
| Nice night to get insomnia!
 
| yaya69 wrote:
 
| oittaa wrote:
| Unfortunately the NASA stream online was a disaster. Choppy video
| and it seemed like nobody had prepared anything. Also 720p in
| 2022...
| 
| Don't get me wrong, the images are amazing, but when small
| startups like Rocket Lab can have uninterrupted streams all the
| way to the orbit, but NASA stream from a studio looks more
| amateurish than your average 13-year-old Fortnite player on
| Twitch, it leaves a pretty bad impression.
 
  | SalmoShalazar wrote:
  | I think NASA's funding generally goes towards doing science
  | rather than optimizing their Fortnite streams
 
  | the_cat_kittles wrote:
  | the classic "hacker news landing page critique" applied to
  | nasa, love it
 
  | ehsankia wrote:
  | Seriously it was such a mess. Lag aside, they had MULTIPLE
  | cases of either someone's mic not being on, or someone with a
  | hot mic after they were done whispering over the stream. Almost
  | every single transition to scientists in other cities failed.
  | This is really unfortunate because they hyped up this event big
  | time. They announced it two weeks in advance, had a countdown,
  | even had scientists do "reaction" videos to seeing the photos
  | for the first time...
  | 
  | People often underestimate how insanely hard it is to put
  | something like this together, but I'm surprised NASA did, It's
  | not like it's the first time NASA does a livecast.
 
  | dan_quixote wrote:
  | I'm not sure if NASA or the White House directed that stream.
  | I've seen much better-organized streams from NASA. It wasn't
  | just technically flawed. It was late, abrupt, disjointed and
  | the talking points appeared to be delivered by people that had
  | little knowledge in the matter. I can't believe I saw that
  | level of disorganization from our highest executive office.
 
| kryptn wrote:
| I've seen this comparison floating around for the deep field.
| 
| https://imgsli.com/MTE2Mjc3
 
| slfnflctd wrote:
| The exoplanet analysis is what I'm most intrigued by. They're
| getting much more data than in the past on these.
| 
| Of course they went for an easy gas giant target first (it has
| lots of water, which is great), but those Earth-like planets in
| the Goldilocks zone are gonna be some of the most exciting stuff
| that comes out of this. Looking forward to it.
 
  | kentonv wrote:
  | So is there any reason not to point this at Proxima Centauri b,
  | like, ASAP?
  | 
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxima_Centauri_b
 
    | yupper32 wrote:
    | I don't know about Proxima Centauri b, but they'll be
    | spending around 25% of "Cycle 1" (the first 6,000 hours of
    | science) working on exoplanets, don't worry:
    | 
    | "Over the coming year, researchers will use spectroscopy to
    | analyze the surfaces and atmospheres of several dozen
    | exoplanets, from small rocky planets to gas- and ice-rich
    | giants. Nearly one-quarter of Webb's Cycle 1 observation time
    | is allocated to studying exoplanets and the materials that
    | form them." - https://www.nasa.gov/image-
    | feature/goddard/2022/nasa-s-webb-...
 
    | sbierwagen wrote:
    | WASP-96b has an orbit that passes in front of its star,
    | Proxima Centauri b doesn't.
    | 
    | An obvious target for the coronagraph for regular imaging,
    | but there's no way to get a transmission spectrum of its
    | atmosphere.
 
  | saiya-jin wrote:
  | 1150 light years away! Imagine how much more details can be
  | detected for stuff within 50 light years.
  | 
  | Really, they should be already building 2nd James Webb. I am
  | sure even 10 of them would get 100% utilization for their whole
  | lifetime. I can only imagine what kind of needless political
  | game is happening around prioritization of time slots for it.
  | 
  | Or start working on next-gen, bigger, more resilient etc. It
  | costs peanuts compared to any significant CERN upgrade and we
  | have so much room to progress in astronomy (aka understanding
  | our home, this universe) just by getting more data and
  | resolution.
 
    | mden wrote:
    | The next NASA space telescope is The Nancy Grace Roman Space
    | Telescope - https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/the-nancy-
    | grace-roman-spac....
 
    | jacquesm wrote:
    | I fear there won't be any more JWSTs at all. People are
    | already bitching about how much it cost and that all it does
    | is make pretty pictures right here in this thread and there
    | were many times that it came within a hair of having its
    | budget slashed.
    | 
    | Super happy we have _one_ JWST, and I hope fervently that it
    | will outlast its original mission by a large fraction, every
    | sign right now points in that direction.
 
      | coldpie wrote:
      | > People are already bitching about how much it cost
      | 
      | I like to point out that Microsoft could have paid for
      | seven JWSTs (development costs and all) with what they paid
      | for one Activision.
 
        | radicaldreamer wrote:
        | Now imagine the funding for all the spy satellite
        | programs over the past few decades...
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | Hubble _definitely_ piggybacked on the defense
        | applications, for JWST that isn 't the case.
 
| toomuchtodo wrote:
| Was worth every penny.
 
| frebord wrote:
| Is there any attempt or is it even possible to correct for the
| distortion caused by the gravitational lensing?
 
| lbrito wrote:
| I remember reading something in the lines of: we know this nebula
| to be composed of gasses X and Y, which have colors A and B. As a
| layman it was unclear to me if this statement means they are
| applying a color palette to a monochrome image(s) using some
| educated guesses or something else.
| 
| Is infrared the only (or the most convenient, most useful etc)
| spectrum visible given the great distance? If we could get close
| enough, I suppose we would see things in clearer visible light.
| Without any enhancements, long exposures etc, would they be
| anywhere as colorful as the nebula images? Would they be visible
| to us at all, or are the emissions too weak even up close to make
| any impression to our eyes?
 
  | pkaye wrote:
  | They have dozens filters on the telescope so they take multiple
  | pictures at different wavelength and assign colors to them and
  | combine them.
  | 
  | The galaxies from the early universe would not be visible in
  | the visible spectrum since due to red shift, its become
  | infrared spectrum. Also infrared spectrum can see through
  | stellar dust so some things become more transparent in the
  | photos.
 
  | zanecodes wrote:
  | (Disclaimer: I am not an astronomer)
  | 
  | As you may be aware, all digital images are composed of a color
  | palette applied to monochrome images, it just so happens that
  | we usually pick a color palette of red, green, and blue, which
  | ideally correspond as closely as possible to the three
  | wavelengths of light to which the imaging sensors in our
  | cameras (and also our eyes) are sensitive, thus reproducing
  | what our eyes would see in person.
  | 
  | In the case of JWST, mid- and far-infrared sensors were chosen
  | for several reasons, the first being that due to the
  | accelerating expansion of the universe, light from further away
  | (equivalently, light from further back in time) has been
  | stretched out along its path of travel, causing its wavelength
  | to be shifted further into the infrared spectrum. Another
  | possible reason is that infrared wavelengths penetrate the
  | interstellar dust clouds much better than visible or
  | ultraviolet light, allowing us to see stars and galaxies that
  | were previously hidden by dust.
  | 
  | Since JWST captures wavelengths of light that we can't see, we
  | have to apply some sort of visible-light palette to the
  | monochrome images it sends back. At the bottom of this image,
  | you can see which wavelengths were mapped to which visible-
  | light colors: https://stsci-
  | opo.org/STScI-01G7N9A6934R1WRWBJY1ZXB98B.png One key aspect of
  | this mapping is that the order of wavelengths has been
  | preserved; shorter IR wavelengths are colored blue while longer
  | ones are colored red. It's likely that this mapping is non-
  | linear though, so the relative distances between IR wavelengths
  | are not the same as the distances between the hues in the
  | image, and this mapping was chosen to maximize the visible
  | detail in the resulting image, as well as to highlight
  | scientifically relevant information such as dust clouds and
  | areas of star formation, so it's not totally arbitrary.
  | 
  | In addition, the dynamic range of JWST is much much larger than
  | the pixels in any display. The raw data values probably range
  | from 0 to some hundreds of thousands, while your display's
  | pixel brightness can only go from 0 to 255 (or maybe 1023, if
  | you have a 10-bit HDR display). While we could simply map the
  | maximum pixel value to 255 and compress everything else in
  | between, this would lose nearly all of the detail present in
  | the darker regions of the images, compressing them to 0.
  | Instead, a non-linear brightness mapping is applied, to best
  | represent all the information present in darker regions without
  | blowing out the bright stars and galaxies.
  | 
  | So to answer your questions, the colors shown in the images are
  | not what you would see in person. Without any enhancements you
  | probably wouldn't be able to see much if any of the dust
  | clouds, and many of the redder galaxies would not be visible to
  | you at all, while all the rest would be different hues than the
  | ones shown (probably mostly whites, yellows, and reds).
 
| Barrera wrote:
| It's easy to lose sight of this in the amazing images:
| 
| > In a dream come true for exoplaneteers, NASA's James Webb Space
| Telescope has demonstrated its unprecedented ability to analyze
| the atmosphere of a planet more than 1,000 light-years away. With
| the combined forces of its 270-square-foot mirror, precision
| spectrographs, and sensitive detectors, Webb has - in a single
| observation - revealed the unambiguous signature of water,
| indications of haze, and evidence for clouds that were thought
| not to exist based on prior observations. The transmission
| spectrum of the hot gas giant WASP-96 b, made using Webb's Near-
| Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph, provides just a
| glimpse into the brilliant future of exoplanet research with
| Webb.
| 
| and later:
| 
| > WASP-96 b is one of more than 5,000 confirmed exoplanets in the
| Milky Way. Located roughly 1,150 light-years away in the
| southern-sky constellation Phoenix, it represents a type of gas
| giant that has no direct analog in our solar system. With a mass
| less than half that of Jupiter and a diameter 1.2 times greater,
| WASP-96 b is much puffier than any planet orbiting our Sun. And
| with a temperature greater than 1000degF, it is significantly
| hotter. WASP-96 b orbits extremely close to its Sun-like star,
| just one-ninth of the distance between Mercury and the Sun,
| completing one circuit every 31/2 Earth-days.
 
| datadata wrote:
| When I was observing the 2017 total solar eclipse, my attention
| was interrupted for a few seconds by someone who was driving a
| car. Their headlights turned on as they kept driving, not
| stopping for a minute to see something that for a given place on
| earth happens once every four centuries. The few people
| dismissing this reminded me of that experience.
 
  | sixstringtheory wrote:
  | I know people who care greatly about the JWST but will go
  | around the company slack belittling people for wishing happy
  | new year, wielding a cosmic cudgel of unimportance on the day.
  | 
  | But everything humans find important are only that due to human
  | and sociological constructs, whether calendrical or
  | cosmological. Nothing matters, except what matters to you. The
  | unthinking matter of nature is utterly indifferent (as far as
  | we know or think).
  | 
  | - someone who drove a long, long way to see the same solar
  | eclipse, no regrets!
 
| amelius wrote:
| I'd like to see some shots of Earth too.
 
| mtlmtlmtlmtl wrote:
| Disclaimer: IANA scientist of any sort, just a huge nerd.
| 
| I've been interested in astronomy since I learned to read, and
| JWST has been planned for most of my life(all but 2 years if you
| count all explorations of ideas for a post-hubble telescope since
| about 95). I've been waiting for this my whole life, so this
| feels like a strangely personal event to me even though I had
| nothing to do with it myself. It's so hard to even put into words
| the tremendousness of this technological and scientific
| achievement, so I won't try.
| 
| Anyway, enough sap.
| 
| I'm super stoked that they've already started taking spectra of
| exoplanets. This one was sort of an "easier" one but the detail
| was unprecedented as with all the other observations. I can't
| wait to see some results on some of these smaller rocky planets
| in their star's "goldilocks zone".
| 
| These are the planets that have simply been out of reach until
| now, and are the most interesting in terms of searching for signs
| of life.
 
| chaps wrote:
| Direct links --
| 
| Stephan's Quintet (NIRCam and MIRI Composite Image):
| 
| https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G7DB1FHPMJCCY59CQGZC1YJQ.png
| 
| Southern Ring Nebula (NIRCam and MIRI Images Side by Side):
| 
| https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G79R28V7S4AXDN8NG5QCPGE3.png
| 
| "Cosmic Cliffs" in the Carina Nebula (NIRCam Image):
| 
| https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G7ETPF7DVBJAC42JR5N6EQRH.png
| 
| Webb's First Deep Field (NIRCam Image):
| 
| https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G7DDBW5NNXTJV8PGHB0465QP.png
| 
| Exoplanet WASP-96 b (NIRISS Transmission Spectrum):
| 
| https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G7NBXDHYYSVBP2M476PRGG3A.png
 
  | samstave wrote:
  | May anyone please ELI5 how to interpret the WASP-96 water
  | spectrum graph above?
 
    | coldpie wrote:
    | Elements absorb light at certain frequencies. Given a
    | spectral analysis of the light that passes through the
    | atmosphere and another of the light that doesn't pass through
    | the atmosphere, you can take the difference and see what
    | frequencies were absorbed by the atmosphere. This tells you
    | what elements make up the atmosphere. The H2O sections in the
    | graph are the light frequencies that are absorbed by water
    | molecules ("amount of light blocked" on the Y axis),
    | indicating that the atmosphere contains water.
    | 
    | More here:
    | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_spectroscopy
    | 
    | Much more about this particular graph here:
    | https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/goddard/2022/nasa-s-
    | webb-...
 
  | vishnugupta wrote:
  | If it helps others like me, I found it easier to download the
  | images through wget and then open the local file through
  | browser.
 
  | pwned1 wrote:
  | My god, look at the _background_ of the first image at full
  | scale.
 
    | jcims wrote:
    | I really wish astronomers would come up (or use) a standard
    | mechanism for indicating the field of view of an image. The
    | scale of this one in the night sky is much larger than the
    | deep field one.
 
      | DrBazza wrote:
      | Grain of sand at arms length for yesterday's deep field.
 
        | luqtas wrote:
        | is not lovely it reached internet just after 80% of the
        | planet being able to see the sun?
 
      | racingmars wrote:
      | The image details do have the dimensions listed in a
      | standard measure down under the "Fast Facts" section; I
      | assume this will be included for every image release.
      | 
      | The deep field image says it's about 2.4 arcmin across[1],
      | Stephan's Quintet image is about 7.4 arcmin across[2], etc.
      | 
      | [1] https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/03
      | 5/01G... [2] https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/image
      | s/2022/034/01G...
 
        | oAlbe wrote:
        | Is there a way to rapport an arcmin to a measurement that
        | would be more easily understandable? Not necessarily as a
        | multiple of grains of rice.
 
        | yvoschaap wrote:
        | 7.3 arcminutes = 16 light-years
 
        | mwint wrote:
        | Wait, but it's a ~cone, right? So it must be 16ly across
        | at some specific distance from us?
 
        | agrajag wrote:
        | That's the distance of an object away that has a parallax
        | of 7.3 arcminutes and a baseline of 1AU. The 7.3
        | arcminutes referenced here is the width of the image on
        | the celestial sphere.
 
        | jcims wrote:
        | Your thumb at arms length is ~2 degrees or ~120
        | arcminutes wide. The fingernail on your index finger at
        | arm's length is ~1 degree or 60 arcminutes wide.
        | 
        | The moon is about half a degree or 30 arcminutes wide.
        | This doesn't make sense but give it a try tonight if the
        | moon is out.
        | 
        | FWIW many of the galaxies and nebula you see in
        | astrophotography are actually bigger in the night sky
        | than one might guess. Andromeda for example is about 6
        | times wider than the moon at ~3 degrees across -
        | https://slate.com/technology/2014/01/moon-and-andromeda-
        | rela...
 
        | BurningFrog wrote:
        | I propose we use Moon Diameters (MD) as the official HN
        | unit for sky distance.
 
        | zola wrote:
        | I always translate it in my mind to full moons. 30 arcmin
        | == diameter of full moon as seen from earth.
 
        | sbierwagen wrote:
        | A minute of arc is one sixtieth of a degree. (A "minute",
        | get it?)
        | 
        | The moon is between 29.4 and 33.5 arcminutes wide,
        | depending on where it is in its orbit. So about a tenth
        | of the width of the moon.
 
        | leeoniya wrote:
        | > So about a tenth of the width of the moon.
        | 
        | this is so much more digestible than "grain of sand at
        | arm's length", and those two metrics dont feel at all
        | equivalent -- the moon is not ten grains of sand at arm's
        | length wide, right?
 
        | sbierwagen wrote:
        | The moon is pretty darn small. Half a degree wide.
        | Imagine gluing ten grains of sand together, balancing it
        | on a fingertip, then stretching your arm out. Around a
        | degree wide? Depending on your grain of sand, of course.
 
        | leeoniya wrote:
        | hmmm, about the size of an asprin tablet or pea at arm's
        | length, seems to agree with somewhat smaller than
        | thumbnail [1]. maybe i should find and measure some sand
        | now :).
        | 
        | in either case, 1/10 the width of the moon is so much
        | easier to comprehend. when is the last time anyone tried
        | holding a grain of sand at arms length? what a weird
        | comparison to make when everyone on earth already has a
        | stable/familiar reference in the sky.
        | 
        | [1] https://astronomy.com/magazine/stephen-
        | omeara/2010/01/stephe...
 
        | jcims wrote:
        | I know that's usually there. I'd just love to see a
        | little map scale bar or something in EXIF.
        | 
        | [-----------] deg
        | 
        | [--------] '
        | 
        | [----------------------] "
        | 
        | [----------------] ,,"
        | 
        | Super easy.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | Nice idea, really, and very easy to implement.
 
  | rootusrootus wrote:
  | Thanks for the direct links!
  | 
  | > Webb's First Deep Field (NIRCam Image)
  | 
  | Is this image distorted in any way at all? It feels like the
  | galaxies are somehow oriented around a center spot. Not all of
  | them, but enough to give the image a distorted feeling.
  | Probably it's just my mind pattern matching against something
  | that doesn't really exist.
 
    | palmtree3000 wrote:
    | Gravitational lensing. From the description[0]:
    | 
    | Other features include the prominent arcs in this field. The
    | powerful gravitational field of a galaxy cluster can bend the
    | light rays from more distant galaxies behind it, just as a
    | magnifying glass bends and warps images. Stars are also
    | captured with prominent diffraction spikes, as they appear
    | brighter at shorter wavelengths.
    | 
    | [0] https://webbtelescope.org/contents/news-
    | releases/2022/news-2...
 
      | samstave wrote:
      | So, would that mean that the gravitational lensing over
      | how-ever-many-light-years is ALSO coupled with the
      | convex/cave aspect of the pico-adjusting of the JWT 'lens'
      | such that even our JWT's pico-adjustments affect the NORMAL
      | of the photons to the image?
      | 
      | Can this be adjusted for?
      | 
      | Wouldnt the pico-arc of the overall array affect the image
      | output due to the distances involved such that we receive
      | "false gravitational lensing, simply based on distance from
      | the sensor"
      | 
      | ?
      | 
      | I wonder if a more precise version(s) of the hex lenses
      | could be made such that they can 'normal-ize' on a much
      | more refined basis.
      | 
      | I know that each JWT is already capable of mico-flexes to
      | each cell... but if we can develope an even further
      | refinement (Moores law on the JWTs hex lenses resolution)
      | we will be able to make thousands of images with varying
      | the the normalization to each receiving area and comparing
      | image quality.
      | 
      | Also, I am sure there are folks who know the reflective
      | characteristics of photons from each wavelength that would
      | allow for orientations for each wavelength.
      | 
      | --
      | 
      | Do ALL 'light' wavelengths, particles bounce off the
      | reflector materials in the same way? - meaning do infra
      | waves/photons bounce in the exact same way as some other
      | wavelength with the exact same orientation of the sensor?
      | 
      | ---
      | 
      | Do they do any 'anti-gravitational-lensing' correction
      | calcs to 'anti-bend' a photons path to us to 're-normalize'
      | the path that we should have seen?
      | 
      | Whats the current science behind such?
 
        | samstave wrote:
        | I'm convinced we are receiving "Wobbly Photons"
        | 
        | Meaning that no matter waht, when we speak of
        | gravitational lenses, we could, usting JWST account for
        | the "wobble" of a photon, nased on the accurate knowledge
        | of where a body was, via measuring through multiples of
        | JSWT observations... (ideally through actually multiple
        | JWSTs, in differnt locations)
        | 
        | The idea being that if we can triangulate a more precice
        | location between earth [A] and galaxy [N] - set of all
        | galaxies/bodies/whatever,
        | 
        | We may be able to calculate the influence of gravity lens
        | upon phont differentials based on when they came from and
        | how far...
        | 
        | Ultimately making adjustments to the output of an image
        | \based on super deep-field focus which is effectively
        | selecting to the phtons of interest... and we can
        | basically "carbon date" the accuracy of an image with a
        | higher resolution?
 
        | qwertywert_ wrote:
        | The gravitational lensing matches exactly how it looked
        | in Hubble's deep field overlay, so I would guess no the
        | JWST lens is not causing any "false" gravitational
        | lensing? If that's what you are asking.
 
        | samstave wrote:
        | Thanks!
        | 
        | I worded that poorly ;
        | 
        | Wouldn't one be able to adjust the perceived path of the
        | photon after time, to adjust for re-normalizing the path
        | of the photon based on the understanding of the
        | gravitational arc imposed on such -- meaning the astro
        | equivalent of "ZOOM. ENHANCE!" :-)
 
        | qwertywert_ wrote:
        | Ah right, good question yes it seems like it could be
        | possible..
 
        | 8note wrote:
        | Depending on the orientation, you wouldn't have the right
        | pixels to put for the angle of view from straight on.
        | 
        | Eg, you'd normally see the side view of an object, but
        | the lensing gets you the top and bottom views
 
      | april_22 wrote:
      | Will the JWST be able to make photos of black holes,
      | similar to the ones the EHT made? And if yes, can the JWST
      | be used to study black holes?
 
        | nullc wrote:
        | Producing an "image" of a black holes requires
        | astronomical, ahem, resolution because they're so far
        | away (thankfully). To achieve this kind of resolution you
        | need an aperture of thousand of kilometers.
        | 
        | The EHT images are created using synthetic aperture
        | techniques to create an effective aperture with a
        | diameter of earth's orbit around the sun. But this is
        | only currently possible at radio frequencies due to our
        | ability to capture, store, and coherently combine the
        | phase information. It's essentially SDR beam forming
        | across space and time.
        | 
        | We can also study black holes though visible and IR
        | observations through their effects of the things around
        | them-- lensing from their mass, matter heated up by
        | falling in. Here is an image I took of the relativistic
        | speed matter jet believed to originate from black hole in
        | M87: https://nt4tn.net/astro/#M87jet ... and Webb can do
        | a lot better than I can with a camera lens in my back
        | yard. :)
        | 
        | Aside, there is some controversy about the EHT black hole
        | images. A recent paper claims to be able to reproduce the
        | ring like images using the EHT's imaging process and a
        | simulated point source-- raising the question of the
        | entire image just being a processing artifact.
        | https://telescoper.wordpress.com/2022/05/13/m87-ring-or-
        | arte... Though it's not surprising to see concerns raised
        | around cutting edge signal processing-- LIGO suffered
        | from a bit of that, for example, but confidence there has
        | been improved by a significant number of confirming
        | observations (including optical confirmations of ligo
        | events).
 
        | april_22 wrote:
        | Thank you!
        | 
        | Another question: are they already planning a successor
        | to JWST? Is something better even possible? If it took
        | more than 30 years, we should start sooner than later :)
 
        | btilly wrote:
        | The next better thing won't likely take 30 years.
        | 
        | https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/2021/10/28/starship-
        | is-st... is correct. No NASA planning, including for
        | space telescopes, shows any understanding of how much
        | Starship changes the game. Instead of one, we can put up
        | a network of telescopes. And try out crazy ideas.
        | 
        | Here is a concrete example. https://www.researchgate.net/
        | publication/231032662_A_Cryogen... lays out how a 100
        | meter telescope could be erected on the Moon to study the
        | early universe with several orders of magnitude better
        | resolution than the JWST. The total weight of their
        | design is around 8 tons. With traditional NASA
        | technologies, transport of the material alone is over $30
        | billion and it had better work. With Starship,
        | transportation is in the neighborhood of $10 million.
        | Suppose that precision equipment added $40 million to the
        | cost. Using Starship, for the cost of the JWST, we can
        | put 200 missions of this complexity in space. Using a
        | variety of different experimental ideas. And if only half
        | of them worked, we'd still be 99 telescopes ahead of the
        | JWST.
        | 
        | So where is Starship? It is on the pad, undergoing
        | testing. They have a list of 75 environmental things to
        | take care of before launch. Which means that they likely
        | launch this month or next. At the planned construction
        | cadence, even if the first 3 blow up, by Christmas it
        | should be a proven technology.
 
        | ceejayoz wrote:
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_proposed_space_obse
        | rva...
        | 
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAFIR is the closest to a
        | proposed JWST successor; the others largely serve
        | different purposes.
 
        | pja wrote:
        | > The EHT images are created using synthetic aperture
        | techniques to create an effective aperture with a
        | diameter of earth's orbit around the sun.
        | 
        | Small correction: The EHT is a synthetic aperture
        | telescope the size of the Earth, not the size of the
        | Earth's orbit around the Sun.
        | 
        | Synthetic aperture telescopes need both amplitude & phase
        | information from each observing station & have to combine
        | the phase of simultaneous observations in order to create
        | the final image. We can't do this on the scale of the
        | earth's orbit, because we don't have a radio telescope on
        | the far side of the sun!
        | 
        | Maybe one day ...
 
        | chrisweekly wrote:
        | > "Here is an image I took of the relativistic speed
        | matter jet believed to originate from black hole in M87:
        | https://nt4tn.net/astro/#M87jet ... and Webb can do a lot
        | better than I can with a camera lens in my back yard. :)"
        | 
        | You, sir, have just contributed a prime example of HN
        | comments at their best. Your astrophotography is
        | outstanding. Thank you for sharing! :)
 
      | rootusrootus wrote:
      | Ah, that makes perfect sense. I guess I should have RTFM
      | rather than just gawk at the pictures. Thanks for the ELI5!
 
        | russh wrote:
        | Oh, that makes sense. I was wondering about the odd
        | shapes.
 
    | coldpie wrote:
    | Yes, it is distorted by a gravitational lensing effect of a
    | massive galaxy cluster. Each image has a short discussion at
    | this link, and a longer discussion linked via "Learn more
    | about this image" for even more info:
    | https://www.nasa.gov/webbfirstimages
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | bcherry wrote:
    | Something missing from this discussion that's worth pointing
    | out:
    | 
    | This image shows profound "gravitational lensing", which you
    | know. But what you might not know is that is precisely _why_
    | they chose to photograph it.
    | 
    | This galaxy cluster (SMACS 0723) may be the most well known
    | and powerful gravitational lens we have observed. The
    | galaxies shown distorted around the edges are actually behind
    | the lens, but are magnified by it. This means we can see even
    | farther in this region of space than normal, because we
    | compound the power of the JWST with the power of this natural
    | lens.
    | 
    | It all adds up to providing the "deepest" view of the
    | universe yet, allowing us to see galaxies at a distance of
    | more than 13.2B lightyears. This lets us see structures
    | formed in the infancy of the universe, that wouldn't be
    | possible looking at most other points in the sky, or even
    | anywhere else in this deep field besides the perimeter of the
    | lens in the middle.
 
      | t9999999999999 wrote:
      | The elongated double lensed galaxy to the right of centre
      | shows lots of point sources. These look like globular
      | clusters or maybe satellite galaxies (maybe these are the
      | same thing in the early universe?).
 
  | mrandish wrote:
  | Thanks for posting these links! It was frustrating that the
  | main NASA PR pages linked photos that were 1280x720. I guess
  | that's to protect their bandwidth costs since much of the
  | general public is probably viewing on mobile anyway and higher
  | res would not only be slower but wasted bits.
  | 
  | I just wish NASA had provided a link at the bottom of their
  | low-res image pages to intermediate sized images (~4k) for
  | desktop viewing.
 
    | yread wrote:
    | you can also download full res (even uncompressed) images
    | from ESA site (they developed two of the IR instruments)
 
    | Wowfunhappy wrote:
    | Not that I'm complaining since I hate jpeg compression, but
    | you'd think that if they were concerned about bandwidth, they
    | wouldn't use png...
 
    | epistasis wrote:
    | Mobile is actually a great platform to get Hugh resolution,
    | since you can zoom in really easily and navigate the full
    | image.
    | 
    | However, after spending 10 minutes on mobile this morning, I
    | was unable to find any high resolution images, and many
    | images had that anti-pattern of a BS HTML gallery that
    | severely restricts interacting with the image.
 
      | collaborative wrote:
      | Past a certain resolution, mobile devices automatically
      | scale down images. This is hard to see in real-world images
      | like pictures/galaxies. But try to open a really large
      | image with some text in it and you will surely see how the
      | text has turned blurry
 
    | coldpie wrote:
    | I believe this page has what you want:
    | https://www.nasa.gov/webbfirstimages Click on the image,
    | twice, to get to a large-but-not-crazy resolution photo.
 
  | j0e1 wrote:
  | > "Cosmic Cliffs" in the Carina Nebula (NIRCam Image):
  | 
  | > https://stsci-opo.org/STScI-01G7ETPF7DVBJAC42JR5N6EQRH.png
  | 
  | Is this for real?! It looks like it came right out of a Sci-Fi
  | movie/book. Could anyone explain how much of this is post-
  | editing magic?
 
    | randyrand wrote:
    | Does anyone have a simulated image of what it would look like
    | in visible light without red shifting?
    | 
    | i.e. If we were moving at the same velocity of the Nebula
    | looking with our own eyes.
    | 
    | i.e. What it would look like "in real life if I actually went
    | there"
 
      | yaakov34 wrote:
      | These objects are much too faint to see much of anything
      | with human eyes. We can see them in astrophotography
      | because the exposures are hours long (or weeks even,
      | sometimes), and because telescopes gather more light than
      | the eye per unit time, as well. This is why these nebulae
      | look like billowing clouds - they are huge (light years
      | across), so some light is absorbed as it crosses them, and
      | some of the infrared light emitted by them adds up. And
      | then we enhance the effect by taking very long exposures.
      | If we actually went and stood near or even inside these
      | nebulae, we would still be in pretty hard interstellar
      | vacuum, and we wouldn't see anything.
 
        | randyrand wrote:
        | Very nice description. Thanks for your time and effort.
 
    | sbierwagen wrote:
    | Image stacking to remove noise and optical artifacts, careful
    | use of color filters to enhance contrast and pull out detail.
    | The press release says it used Red: F444W, Orange: F335M,
    | Yellow: F470N, Green: F200W, Cyan: F187N, Blue: F090W. The N
    | filters are narrowband. F470N is only 54 nanometers wide:
    | https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/jwst-near-infrared-
    | camera/nircam...
    | 
    | Almost all the light in this image is way off the red end of
    | the human visual spectrum, of course. The shortest wavelength
    | filter is F090W which has a center wavelength of 902nm, about
    | the same color as the light coming out of a TV remote
    | infrared LED, which is barely visible in pure darkness.
    | 
    | This is what it looks like through a film SLR, without the
    | detail enhancing filters:
    | http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~ozprof/3372f.htm Here's a 20 minute
    | exposure through a telescope:
    | http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~ozprof/3372fk.jpg Maybe what you
    | would see with your own eyes through binoculars at a dark
    | site well away from city lights. A dim red smudge, hints of
    | finer detail.
 
      | jvanderbot wrote:
      | How does this "blueshift" compare to what we'd get if we
      | just corrected for the relative-speed-induced redshift?
 
        | sbierwagen wrote:
        | NGC3372 is inside our galaxy, just 8500 light years away.
        | It's not redshifted by metric expansion to any
        | appreciable degree, (A calculator I just checked gave me
        | a z of 0.000000617) and radial velocity is a sedate ~34
        | km/s. (z = 0.000000115)
        | 
        | The redshift on the other JWST images is because most of
        | them are of objects that are much, much, much farther
        | away. Infrared telescopes are great for observing those,
        | but that's not the only thing they're used for.
 
        | jvanderbot wrote:
        | Maybe my question would be better asked for other objects
        | images then, but I can just google how far things are
        | redshifted at extreme distances as well.
 
        | ehsankia wrote:
        | My understanding is that the IR here is used to see
        | "through" the "smoke", so you can see more details that
        | would normally be obstructed.
        | 
        | A good way to see this is comparing it to Hubble [1], a
        | lot of the extra detail you see is thanks to IR letting
        | you see the stars behind.
        | 
        | [1] https://johnedchristensen.github.io/WebbCompare/
 
        | jvanderbot wrote:
        | Understood!
        | 
        | What I was asking is: Is the target's normally-visible
        | light redshifted into the same bands that JWST is
        | measuring, higher? or lower frequency?
        | 
        | That doesn't have anything to do with why JWST uses IR.
 
        | sbierwagen wrote:
        | Redshift refers to how the wavelength of a photon can
        | change if the observer is moving relative to it, (Doppler
        | shift, redshift if you're moving away from the photon,
        | blueshift if you're moving towards it) or cosmological
        | redshift. (The fabric of the universe expanding, reducing
        | photon energy)
        | 
        | NGC3372 is a cloud of (relatively) hot gas and dust. It's
        | emitting broad spectrum blackbody radiation: it's
        | emitting on all wavelengths. You can look at the same
        | cloud at different wavelengths and see different things,
        | telling you what parts of the cloud are at what
        | temperature, or relative chemical composition, or what
        | parts are ionized: http://legacy.spitzer.caltech.edu/uplo
        | aded_files/graphics/fu... Nothing here is redshifted,
        | Spitzer is just capturing different light entirely.
        | 
        | In the side by side of JWST and Hubble https://pbs.twimg.
        | com/media/FXecm6vXwAMPhoc?format=jpg&name=... https://pbs
        | .twimg.com/media/FXecnp2XkAE4Rs5?format=jpg&name=... you
        | see broadly the same thing, but Hubble is almost all
        | visible-light while JWST goes deeper into infrared and
        | sees cloud structure that Hubble doesn't.
 
    | BurningFrog wrote:
    | Much of it is in infrared light we can't see, so it's
    | "transposed" to the visible spectrum.
    | 
    | Not much weirder than looking at an X-ray image.
 
    | The5thElephant wrote:
    | It's all real, but you would not be able to see it with your
    | bare eyes even if you were relatively close to the nebula.
    | The world around us would look very different if our eyes
    | could perceive more of the infrared and ultraviolet spectrum.
    | 
    | The coloring is usually done to indicate different
    | temperatures or wavelengths detected, so it can be a bit
    | misleading.
 
      | DougBTX wrote:
      | Maybe a similar but different question then, but what would
      | a photo on Earth look like with this filter?
 
        | vanattab wrote:
        | The color mapping of these images is not the same as the
        | what is used for JWST but this will probably give you
        | some clue.
        | 
        | https://images.app.goo.gl/9gqtdbcsBxY6RonY9
        | https://images.app.goo.gl/pG7sfjLGU9nqmAvH7
        | https://images.app.goo.gl/JGebDZ7V5EamKoY89
 
    | Retric wrote:
    | It's real light, just color shifted as the JWST is designed
    | to look at severely very distant and thus red shifted
    | objects. The nebula is however much closer than that.
    | 
    | Anyway, that looks like science fiction because science
    | fiction borrowed that look from astronomy.
    | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebula
 
      | aaroninsf wrote:
      | I have been wondering,
      | 
      | how does the scale of color shifting relate to the red-
      | shift present in deep-field subject?
      | 
      | Idly wondering: are the furtherest objects being captured,
      | so red-shifted, that the translation for human viewing done
      | in these images more or less balances that out, so what we
      | see in the translated images for some thickness of
      | distance-bubble, is what we would see from a much closer
      | perspective with the naked eye, akin to "true color." (I.e.
      | so close that the relative red-shift would be
      | insignificant...)
 
  | ndm000 wrote:
  | I know nothing about optics. What is the effect that causes the
  | 6 or 8 points of light of come off of bright objects? Does it
  | have to do with the hex-shaped mirrors on JWT?
 
    | PavleMiha wrote:
    | Yes, and also two of the trusses to the secondary mirror
    | (these are the two additional horizontal lines). The Hubble
    | Space Telescope gets 4 lines because of its 4 trusses.
 
    | Keyframe wrote:
    | Aperture shape, so in this case I guess the answer is yes?
 
    | arianvanp wrote:
    | it's called a point spread function; and is an artifact that
    | occurs in any mirror telescope. https://bigthink.com/starts-
    | with-a-bang/james-webb-spikes/ explains it pretty well.
 
| divbzero wrote:
| Somewhere in one of those distant galaxies, a modestly advanced
| life form has deployed their first infrared telescope into orbit
| around their star system and captured a deep field image that
| happens to contain our Milky Way. Discussions in their hive brain
| include speculation on life existing beyond their star system.
 
| k4ch0w wrote:
| I'm super proud of all our scientists for this work. It's
| honestly one of the most astounding photos I've ever looked at.
 
| turdnagel wrote:
| This kind of stuff is really awe-inspiring. I have a couple of
| questions for anyone who is knowledgeable on the subject:
| 
| 1. Looking at the light from the tiny red-shifted galaxies that
| are ~13 billion years old... would the Milky Way appear the same
| to an observer ~13 billion ly from us?
| 
| 2. What is the cause of the star pointed artifacts (specifically,
| having 6 major "points") for particularly bright objects? If you
| zoom in closely on any one of the points, you can almost make out
| a hex grid, as if the shape of the telescope's mirrors is the
| cause. Is that correct?
 
  | ip26 wrote:
  | The points are caused by the support arms of the secondary
  | mirror.
 
  | opwieurposiu wrote:
  | 1. Yes pretty much.
  | 
  | 2. Yes the artifact shape is related to the mirror shape, and
  | the support arms which block some light. this is called a
  | Diffraction spike. There are a bunch of fake web telescope
  | image videos on YouTube with 4pointed diffraction spikes so you
  | can tell they are taken from a different telescope.
  | 
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffraction_spike
 
  | 12ian34 wrote:
  | on 1., I'm not sure but I'd guess so, yes.
  | 
  | on 2., you are seeing Diffraction Spikes[0] which are artefacts
  | of the telescope's design.
  | 
  | [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffraction_spike
 
| smm11 wrote:
| This is the point in Contact when the crazy religious guy pushes
| the button.
 
| smudgy wrote:
| I saw it and I started crying, it's beautiful beyond description
| and belief.
 
  | threads2 wrote:
  | hahaha thanks for the laugh
 
| WebbWeaver wrote:
| I really appreciate the work of the US Air Force Cambridge
| Research Laboratories for creating HITRAN. HITRAN is a molecular
| spectroscopic database used to look molecules in gas and
| atmosphere. They are the standard archive for transmission and
| radiance calculations. Without their groundwork we would not be
| as good at understanding planetary atmospheres.
| 
| https://hitran.org/ free after registration
| 
| https://hitran.org/media/refs/HITRAN-2020.pdf
| 
| HAPI (programming interface manual)
| https://hitran.org/static/hapi/hapi_manual.pdf
| 
| Youtube tutorials
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiKuigtFahk&list=PLqOG3cBizT...
| 
| It is very easy to use and might help to understand WASP-96 b
| transmission spectrum. https://stsci-
| opo.org/STScI-01G7NBXDHYYSVBP2M476PRGG3A.png
| 
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_absorption_by_...
 
  | WebbWeaver wrote:
  | Aww yiss new images! Extremely generous analysis and 3d
  | orientation.
  | 
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/034/01G...
  | 
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/034/01G...
  | 
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/035/01G...
  | 
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/034/01G...
 
| grendelt wrote:
| looks like they changed the lensflare from 4 points to 6... a 50%
| increase!
 
| NeutralForest wrote:
| Absolutely breathtaking that such a tiny window inside the
| universe would cover so much.
 
  | adonovan wrote:
  | It always blows my mind that when you look at the night sky,
  | aside from 7 planets and only 2 galaxies, every point of light
  | you see is a star; but when these space telescopes point at a
  | patch of nothingness, we see a starry night where every point
  | of light is a (freaking) galaxy.
 
| anewpersonality wrote:
| Dumb question. Why can't we focus on a single exoplanet, look for
| mountains, grass, buildings?
| 
| Why am I so stupid but isn't this the obvious thing to do?
 
  | sephamorr wrote:
  | There is a fundamental physics limit at play here: the
  | diffraction limit is linear with the aperture diameter and
  | gives an upper bound on the resolution of a telescope. Having a
  | longer exposure doesn't help - that's for resolving very faint
  | objects (more light collected -> higher signal-to-noise). To
  | resolve a building-sized object on an exoplanet, regardless of
  | its intensity, we'd need a telescope the size of the solar
  | system. There are some proposals to use the gravitational
  | lensing of our sun to create such a telescope, but those
  | projects are decades at least from implementation.
 
    | anewpersonality wrote:
    | This is a good answer, though incredibly depressing
 
    | m0giddo wrote:
    | Here's an example of one of the proposals:
    | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FOCAL_(spacecraft)
 
  | dougmwne wrote:
  | It's because those planets are incredibly far away. The
  | distance is so huge, there is no way to even picture it. It
  | would be a single pixel on any telescope we could conceivably
  | build. What we can do though is measure the chemical
  | composition of their atmospheres. This could be very
  | interesting if we found some hallmarks of life on a rocky
  | planet.
 
  | worker_person wrote:
  | Need a really big mirror, like size of planet to start with.
  | 
  | Another neat idea is to use the Sun as a gravitational lens.
  | But you you would need it put it way past Pluto to get proper
  | focus. So maybe another hundred years to get tech and resources
  | to that point.
  | 
  | https://www.space.com/earth-like-exoplanet-imaging-with-sun
 
  | whatshisface wrote:
  | There aren't telescopes big enough to do that.
 
    | anewpersonality wrote:
 
      | capableweb wrote:
      | > Seeing a bunch of pretty nebulae with artificial colorimg
      | is no longer inspiring, it looks like it could have come
      | out of DALL-E
      | 
      | Yeah, that's totally how science works!
      | 
      | You can't confirm/reject any theories based on pictures
      | that a AI generates, but I guess you'll tell me that "sure
      | we can" with some more hyperbole.
 
      | throwaway4aday wrote:
      | If you're not inspired by these images and the accompanying
      | detail on why they are being taken (especially the
      | exoplanet spectroscopic surveys) then you just aren't
      | thinking hard enough about them.
 
  | ceejayoz wrote:
  | We can, and do. They're so far away that even our largest
  | telescopes see only a few pixels.
  | 
  | Examples:
  | 
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:HR_8799_Orbiting_Exoplane...
  | 
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Beta_Pictoris_b_in_Motion...
  | 
  | When Hubble looked at Pluto, it was a low-detail blur ("The
  | Hubble raw images are a few pixels wide"), and that's _within
  | our solar system_. https://esahubble.org/images/opo1006h/
  | 
  | Remember, the first exoplanet was detected in 1992, and not by
  | imaging; prior to that we didn't even know if they existed at
  | all. JWST's planning started in 1996.
 
  | pkaye wrote:
  | How much details we can see if based on the wavelength of light
  | and the diameter of the telescope. And if you worked it out,
  | the telescope diameter would have to be enormous.
  | 
  | https://calculator.academy/diffraction-limit-calculator/#f1p...
  | 
  | However gravity can bend light so there is some thought of
  | using the sun as a lens. However the observation would have to
  | be pretty far away from our sun so its just wishful thinking in
  | our lifetime.
  | 
  | https://www.freethink.com/space/gravity-telescope
  | 
  | For now the best we will have to see a dot on image via
  | coronagraphy and maybe understand more about the exoplanet
  | through spectroscopy.
 
  | throwaway5752 wrote:
  | Maybe the link changed, but the 5th link down the page, "July
  | 12, 2022 Release ID: 2022-032", is "Webb Reveals Steamy
  | Atmosphere of Distant Planet in Exquisite Detail ", link is
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/news-releases/2022/news-2...
 
    | anewpersonality wrote:
    | Thats a spectograph
 
      | ceejayoz wrote:
      | Yes, and if we do a spectral analysis on a small rocky
      | exoplanet and find a bunch of oxygen, that tells us a lot
      | more exciting information than the 2x2 pixels you might get
      | from an image of it.
 
| silentsea90 wrote:
| Way to brighten my day with awe and wonder, way to ruin my day
| with existential dread about our place in the universe.
 
  | sho_hn wrote:
  | Existential dread pro-tip: The Wikipedia page on "Ultimate fate
  | of the universe" is a fantastic way to compell the question of
  | why anything ultimately matters.
  | 
  | Coming up with personal answers to this is the ultimate
  | character resolve exercise!
 
    | sillysaurusx wrote:
    | See also "Ask HN: What's the point of life?"
    | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28866558
 
    | yreg wrote:
    | I found Kurzgesagt's video on Optimistic Nihilism helpful.
    | 
    | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBRqu0YOH14
 
      | Agamus wrote:
      | Awesome link, thank you. Nietzsche's career was an exercise
      | in creating and promoting the concept of 'creative
      | nihilism' as an alternative to existential pessimism, which
      | works for me!
 
    | idiotsecant wrote:
    | Nothing matters. You live for a while and then you die, but
    | it sure can be a cool trip getting there!
 
      | prometheus76 wrote:
      | Do you feel that way about your family members? Your
      | spouse? Your children? They don't matter?
 
        | idiotsecant wrote:
        | It's important to differentiate between things that
        | matter to my emotional well being and things that
        | _matter_ in a universal sense. Plenty of things matter to
        | my personal monkeybrain - I want to have a stockpile of
        | nutritious, calorie dense foods. I want to feel free of
        | danger from predators and natural hazards, I want members
        | of my tribe to prosper and multiply, etc. All those
        | things might as well be noise on the universal scale.
 
        | sillysaurusx wrote:
        | Yes. By induction, if nothing matters, then they don't
        | matter either.
        | 
        | It helps you relax and put things in perspective. For
        | example, you can focus on achieving high scores just for
        | the sake of it. Have the kids you want, have the life you
        | want, have the things you want, knowing that it's
        | pointless but that you want it and that's enough.
 
        | zaarn wrote:
        | Why does valuing the journey mean you don't value other
        | people?
 
      | silvi9 wrote:
      | You think nothing matters? How can you be so sure?
 
        | checkyoursudo wrote:
        | I'm not sure that matters, does it?
 
      | glitcher wrote:
      | Nothing and Everything matters simultaneously, reality is
      | the ultimate paradox :)
 
        | ckosidows wrote:
        | "Life is all about you and not at all about you" -ZHU
 
      | abrenuntio wrote:
      | The theist gets a sense of the greatness of God. The
      | atheist concludes his own insignificance.
 
  | mkeedlinger wrote:
  | Indeed, it is truly cause to pause and step back. What's the
  | name of that phenomenon common amongst astronauts when they see
  | the earth from afar? I feel like our society could use more of
  | that.
  | 
  | edit: Seems to be called the overview effect [0]
  | 
  | [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overview_effect
 
  | noneeeed wrote:
  | One of my favourite concepts from Douglas Adams was the Total
  | Perspective Vortex, a form of punishment that would drive the
  | victim insane by showing them the entire totality of existence
  | and their place in it.
 
    | _moof wrote:
    | Didn't work on Zaphod though. He just ate the cake.
 
      | ncmncm wrote:
      | The simulated cake. It was in a universe simulation created
      | for him.
 
    | silentsea90 wrote:
    | Wow. That's genius
 
  | teh_klev wrote:
  | It's like looking into the Total Perspective Vortex.
 
  | leeoniya wrote:
  | it's terrifying how alone and ephemeral we truly are, that
  | there are already places in our expanding universe that will
  | never be reachable even via communication with any technology
  | on any time scale (unless universe expansion reverses course).
  | that any communication we may receive today will be from
  | civilizations that have ceased to exist thousands to billions
  | of years ago. and humans will likely never travel outside the
  | solar system.
  | 
  | consciousness is a hell of a drug
 
    | HKH2 wrote:
    | It seems more like the fear of missing out. I don't feel
    | terrified at all.
 
  | layer8 wrote:
  | You're aware that this is just the observable universe? It may
  | be completely irrelevant relative to the total universe. ;)
 
  | WhompingWindows wrote:
  | Why existential dread? We're extremely lucky to be alive. That
  | one sperm hit that one egg and we survived to now. That is
  | extremely unlucky, each of us is one sperm out of hundreds of
  | millions, so savor this existence!!
 
| aruanavekar wrote:
| Great pictures
| https://www.npr.org/sections/pictureshow/2022/07/12/11110028...
 
| peanut_worm wrote:
| Other than the big bright ones (which I guess are nearby stars)
| are all these things different galaxies?
 
  | perlgeek wrote:
  | Yes.
  | 
  | This was an image of a relatively "empty" portion of sky (no
  | stars nearby), so anything you can see has to be pretty bright
  | by itself, which means galaxy, not star.
 
    | pqdbr wrote:
    | Does that also include the very tiny little dots? I have the
    | same question as OP, and I thought the tiny dots were single
    | stars, and the little bigger ones (brighter) were galaxies.
 
| alberth wrote:
| Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't most astronomy photos
| colorized (and not actually such vivid colors in real life).
 
  | jacquesm wrote:
  | Absolutely, these objects would be completely invisible when
  | using visible light so it is all false color, just like a FLIR
  | would show you an image of the infra red light emitted by an
  | object by shifting it to a spectrum that you can directly
  | perceive.
 
  | bognition wrote:
  | Yes.
  | 
  | The photon collectors on JWT detect infra red which is not
  | visible to humans.
 
  | banana_giraffe wrote:
  | Yes. Or rather, it's a color palette mapping whatever range of
  | the EM spectrum the image is gathered with to something we
  | humans can see.
  | 
  | And yes, sometimes the mapping is done to make things look
  | nice.
 
  | deanCommie wrote:
  | What is real life? What are vivid colors?
  | 
  | All electromagnetic radiation is the same. In the sense that
  | every proton/neutron is the same. But adding a few more
  | protons/neutrons creates an entirely new element, with entirely
  | new chemical properties. From something simple come incredibly
  | new powerful behaviours. So just as Iron is massively different
  | from Plutonium, Microwaves are massively different from Gamma
  | rays.
  | 
  | What we call "colors", or "visible light" is not particularly
  | special, except to us, and our specific human biology. It feels
  | more real because it's visible to us, but it's not on the grand
  | scale of the universe.
  | 
  | What we're observing through these telescopes isn't a dog
  | chasing a ball. We're seeing stuff billions of light years
  | away, millions of light years in size, billions of years ago.
  | Passing by trillions of other stars and planets on the way.
  | 
  | These objects are emitting a gargantuan amount of information.
  | Why should we only present the information that happens to be
  | in the same subset as what our primitive primate vision cones
  | can process?
  | 
  | So, no, if you were to teleport to the nebula/galaxy that we're
  | showing images for, it wouldn't look exactly like that to your
  | human eyes. Instead, what you're seeing is what a god with
  | perfect vision of the universe would see. You're seeing the
  | universe for what it is, not just the part of it that is
  | presented to humans.
 
| jonplackett wrote:
| It would be great if they did a before and after shot.
| 
| Like, here's what we could see at this point in space before. Now
| we can see... THIS!
 
  | deelowe wrote:
  | https://petapixel.com/2022/07/11/comparing-hubble-to-james-w...
 
    | capableweb wrote:
    | Yeah, that's not very good implementation. PetaPixel usually
    | have good content, but using a GIF to compare these two
    | images? Come on! You can see the compression artifacts very
    | easily.
 
      | deelowe wrote:
      | This was also recently posted on reddit:
      | https://johnedchristensen.github.io/WebbCompare/
 
        | jonplackett wrote:
        | Was J J Abrahams involved in Webb, because it really
        | seems to produce nice lens flair
 
        | capableweb wrote:
        | What you're seeing is not _lens flares_ but _diffraction
        | spikes_. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffraction_spike
        | 
        | You could call those lens flares I guess, but commonly
        | known as diffraction spikes when it comes to telescopes.
        | In this case they appear because of the supporting struts
        | in the James Webb telescope.
 
      | HedgeGriffon wrote:
      | Umm.. not compression artifacts. GIF uses lossless LZW.
      | Maybe color palette artifacts since GIFs are usually
      | palettized and not true color (although with a tortured use
      | of local color tables they can even be true color)
 
        | capableweb wrote:
        | This is the nitpick we all come here for :)
        | 
        | Choosing a limited palette in order to save bytes, some
        | might say is compression. If said compression hurts the
        | image quality, some might call that "compression
        | artifacts".
        | 
        | The point stands, GIF was a poor choice for the format
        | here.
 
      | yreg wrote:
      | How about this one, by a user from here?
      | 
      | https://blog.wolfd.me/hubble-jwst/
 
        | boriskourt wrote:
        | This is a great way to show all the new distant details.
        | Amazing to think that so many of the artifacts in
        | Hubble's total darkness are galaxies upon galaxies.
 
| historynops wrote:
| A lot of the pictures have some bright stars with 6 long lens
| flare like points coming out of them in a consistent pattern. Is
| that because of the hexagonal shape of JWT's lenses/mirrors?
 
  | ceejayoz wrote:
  | It's not the mirrors, it's the three struts supporting the
  | reflector.
  | 
  | Hubble shows four spikes because it has two struts.
  | 
  | https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/james-webb-spikes/
  | 
  | https://www.universetoday.com/155062/wondering-about-the-6-r...
 
    | krajzeg wrote:
    | I think you also had a similar comment and linked the same
    | article under the previous topic about JWST's first image?
    | 
    | The article is very informative, but my read of it is
    | different: the three major "spikes" are in fact due to the
    | hexagonal shape of the mirrors and how they're laid out. The
    | struts also add three spikes, but: two of them coincide with
    | the mirror spikes, while one of them (from the vertical
    | strut) is visible on its own, and causes the smaller
    | perfectly horizontal spike.
    | 
    | The image I'm basing this on is in your article with a
    | caption starting from "The point spread function for the
    | James Webb Space Telescope" [1]
    | 
    | [1]: https://bigthink.com/wp-
    | content/uploads/2022/03/FOFC8ZPX0AIB...
 
  | deanCommie wrote:
  | From the other comments, I understand why it's there, but i
  | wish they would photoshop them out.
  | 
  | The images take on a more synthetic and fake quality when the
  | technical physical man-made constraints of our telescope get
  | projected out onto the natural very much NON-man-made universe.
  | 
  | Look at https://stsci-
  | opo.org/STScI-01G7ETPF7DVBJAC42JR5N6EQRH.png and observe the
  | incredible entropy in the nebula itself. The consistent,
  | perfect, straight lines, of each star are jarring in the image.
 
    | deanCommie wrote:
    | to be clear - i realize these are for science. they shouldn't
    | be edited for scientists.
    | 
    | but we should edit them :)
 
  | rbliss wrote:
  | Yes, it's a combination of both the primary mirror and struts.
  | The JWST website has a very helpful infographic explaining:
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/01G529MX46J7...
 
    | coldpie wrote:
    | Wow, thanks for this link. The level of communication around
    | JWST's technology and launch has been amazing, and this is a
    | great example of that.
 
    | moffkalast wrote:
    | That's quite exhaustive, but it makes me wonder why isn't
    | anything done to correct for that. Like for example instead
    | of taking one 15h exposure, why not take three 5h exposures
    | and roll the telescope 5 degrees in between, then median
    | filter out the artefacts?
 
      | sbierwagen wrote:
      | JWST does have a roll dither mode: https://jwst-
      | docs.stsci.edu/jwst-general-support/jwst-dither... Don't
      | know why they didn't use it. Maybe they were trying to
      | observe as many targets as possible for the initial release
      | of imagery.
 
      | AnonMO wrote:
      | It took like 5 months to cool web to operational
      | temperatures rolling the telescope would create so much
      | heat all new images would be useless until it cools down
      | again.
 
        | moffkalast wrote:
        | That makes no sense, they have to rotate it every time
        | they take a picture otherwise they'd be looking at the
        | same spot all the time. Motors don't emit that much heat
        | and neither do torque wheels.
        | 
        | Though I suppose now that I think of it, it's possible
        | the main mirror assembly actually has no built in roll
        | control but only pitch, since the yaw part could be done
        | by moving the entire telescope while remaining shaded.
        | I've never seen any videos showing the full movement, but
        | the previews for LUVIOR show it having full 3 degree
        | articulation relative to the heatsink segment, so I
        | assumed the Webb also has it given that they're extremely
        | similar designs.
        | 
        | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzFEaCYhmEs
 
        | AnonMO wrote:
        | LUVIOR is not web. Web doesn't have articulation like
        | LUVIOR its fixed only the mirror segements move. also
        | they don't rorate everytime they take a picture there's
        | limitations beacuse its an infered telescope.
        | https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/jwst-observatory-
        | characteristics.... Web also has a field of view 15x
        | hubble
 
    | MontagFTB wrote:
    | You beat me to it- incredibly helpful diagram. Thanks for
    | sharing it.
 
  | micromacrofoot wrote:
  | Also, I recall reading that those stars are so bright because
  | they're within our galaxy... so they're the foreground really
 
  | deelowe wrote:
  | More or less. That's how they've explained it in the past.
 
  | MontagFTB wrote:
  | Here's an infographic from NASA explaining the phenomenon:
  | https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/01G529MX46J7...
 
  | mackieem wrote:
  | Yeah, it's the hexagonal shape. The objects with the 6
  | diffraction spikes are overexposed compared to the rest of the
  | objects in the picture, so they're generally brighter and/or
  | closer objects.
  | 
  | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBcc3vpJTAU
 
| sk8terboi wrote:
 
| whiteboardr wrote:
| Watching the livestream i was more than surprised, that color
| correction actually happens in Photoshop.
| 
| Also, there seem to be multiple layer-masks involved for specific
| regions and objects.
| 
| I get that you can shift and composite color, based on hue, apply
| filters etc, but: Photoshop?
| 
| Curious if anyone can explain, that what we see is actual science
| or some touched up version of objects in our universe.
| 
| p.s.: What struck me the most is the absence of noise, especially
| for the deep field photo. Hubble took many exposures over weeks,
| which normally would allow for reliable reduction of noise, webb
| took some shots over the course of hours and there's hardly any
| noise to see. Weirdest part is seeing them just "healing
| brushing" away some dots - how is the decision process on
| altering images like that?
| 
| (edit for typos)
 
  | moffkalast wrote:
  | I think you've answered your own question there, it's just PR
  | images touched up by the media team without regard for
  | anything. If there's any science being done it'll be done by
  | matlab scripts using raw data as input.
 
  | dmead wrote:
  | amateur astronomer here.
  | (https://www.instagram.com/mead_observatory/)
  | 
  | 1. photoshop is really good at composing different (spectral)
  | layers together. There is alternatives to this like pixinight
  | that are more geared toward deep sky astronomy work but I'm
  | sure it's easier to hire people that can just take a Photoshop
  | class.
  | 
  | there are many layers/masks involved for different filters. the
  | filters accept or reject certain wavelengths of light and may
  | be designed for specific elements on the periodic table. people
  | often talk about hydrogen filters or oxygen filters, sulfer
  | filters etc. the color distinction you see is actually
  | indicating elemental composition much of the time. I'm not sure
  | what filters webb is using.
  | 
  | 2. modern telescopes clean up their images by taking a "master
  | dark frame" that is a stacked frame of many frames taken with
  | the lens cap on. The goal there is to compute the noise profile
  | of the sensor. I'm sure before launch the darks for the sensors
  | were determined and are at the ready to correct and calibrate
  | images coming from the telescope. think of it as applying a
  | bespoke noise filter for that sensor. It's a fast process to
  | apply it, but not to generate it. If they really make the raws
  | available I'm sure we'll see more noise there.
  | 
  | 3. the touch up you see them doing is the removal of a hot
  | pixel which survived the calibration process with the dark
  | frame. no doubt on space telescopes they still get errant hot
  | pixel of some kind of particle or cosmic ray they don't want
  | makes it to the sensor and flips a bit (and is therefore not
  | account for in the master dark). happens all the time. they're
  | probably keeping a map of where they're getting hot pixels.
 
    | buildbot wrote:
    | To point 3, they are absolutely keeping many, many maps of
    | the pixels and dark current for all of their sensors - this
    | is a good picture of the process for a standard astronomical
    | CCD: https://cdn.nightskypix.com/wp-
    | content/uploads/2020/06/calib...
 
      | dmead wrote:
      | which reminds me, i need to update my dark library and get
      | a light for flats.
 
    | willis936 wrote:
    | Thanks for 3. Without the explanation it really did come off
    | as doctoring data to be more artistic.
 
      | dmead wrote:
      | But they are doctoring it to make it more
      | artistic/presentable. I have no doubt that real astronomy
      | presentations/papers want to see the undoctored data at
      | some point.
      | 
      | Did you mean you thought they were adjusting the content
      | and not just fixing noise?
 
  | jacquesm wrote:
  | The difference between 'actual science' and 'some touched up
  | version of objects in our universe' is smaller than you might
  | think: no matter how good your eyes, if there was no frequency
  | shift involved you would not be able to perceive the image,
  | other than as an array of numbers. To facilitate your
  | consumption of the data it _has_ to be frequency shifted and
  | the easiest way to do this is to map the IR intensity to a
  | range of colors that are graded the same way we grade false
  | color images from other sources: higher intensities get
  | brighter colors and lower intensities darker colors. Because
  | not all of these are equally pleasing to the eye and /or
  | enlightening Photoshop is actually a pretty good choice because
  | it allows for dynamic experimentation what brings out the
  | various details in the best way.
  | 
  | If you would rather stare at an array of numbers or a non
  | colorized version (black-and-white) it would be _much_ harder
  | to make out the various features.
  | 
  | So think of it as a visual aid, rather than an arts project or
  | a way to falsify the data: the colorization is part of the
  | science, specifically: how to present the data best.
 
    | ricardobeat wrote:
    | What would these look like, if you could point a ground
    | telescope at the exact same spot? How much light is in the
    | visible spectrum?
 
      | JacobThreeThree wrote:
      | Here's a Hubble-based nebula that was imaged in both
      | infrared and visible.
      | 
      | https://esahubble.org/images/heic1406c/
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | Great example!
 
        | kache_ wrote:
        | Thanks for sharing this. IMO: Close enough, and good
        | enough :)
 
    | whiteboardr wrote:
    | Thanks, but how is the sausage made then?
    | 
    | Guess, that's my main question.
    | 
    | I get that the aquired data needs to be transformed in a way
    | so we get an image that depicts a reality we can visually
    | process.
    | 
    | I honestly thought there's some tools in Nasa's imaging group
    | that, based on scientific rules, pumps out an image that is
    | correct - seeing Photoshop in use left me wonder...
    | 
    | I get that the investment needs to be "sold" too, would be
    | sad though if we reached fashion-ad conduct for science...
    | 
    | And don't get me wrong: I am in awe and more than happy this
    | thing finally gets put to use.
 
      | semi-extrinsic wrote:
      | There is no "correct" when you are shifting images from
      | infrared to visible. But the "real science" part is
      | probably done with a perceptually uniform color map. Or in
      | the many cases where the image we see is actually a
      | composite of many images taken with the narrow-band IR
      | filter at different central wavelengths, the image might be
      | presented with gaussians of different color corresponding
      | to the different wavelength images. Or each wavelength is
      | considered separately.
 
      | sandgiant wrote:
      | This is manly a demonstration of the imaging capabilities
      | of JWST. Making actual sausage is a way longer, way more
      | boring process.
      | 
      | It depends on the science of course, but generally the
      | sausage is made with specialized software that produces
      | contour plots with error bars and what-have-you. The actual
      | calculations will be done using just numbers, fitting
      | models to data without any pretty pictures at all.
      | 
      | This likely wouldn't have made #1 on HN without "pretty
      | pictures" (this is what astronomers calls them). Photoshop
      | is made for pretty pictures so it would be silly _not_ to
      | use it. :)
 
      | JacobThreeThree wrote:
      | >so we get an image that depicts a reality we can visually
      | process
      | 
      | Since we can't visually process spectrums other than
      | visible, there's no "correct" way to show the image.
 
      | roywiggins wrote:
      | I don't think there's a scientific definition of "correct"
      | for these sorts of images. How would you even define
      | correctness?
 
        | whiteboardr wrote:
        | I might be wrong but in theory you know/see what elements
        | are involved and burned in observed objects.
        | 
        | Based on their distance, hence blue-/redshift, you could
        | at least predict the visible colors we might perceive.
 
      | jacquesm wrote:
      | > Thanks, but how is the sausage made then?
      | 
      | I can't tell you because I wasn't looking over the shoulder
      | of whoever made the image, but at a guess they started off
      | from a black and white image, then turned it into an RGB
      | image and change the various hues until relevant details
      | became easier to see. The reason that that works is because
      | a large scale structure has areas that emit at roughly the
      | same intensity so you can bring these out by colorizing
      | such a range with a gradient around a single hue.
      | 
      | This is not an automated process because a computer would
      | not know what we humans find 'interesting structures', if
      | you could put that into some form of definition then you
      | might be able to automate the process in the same way that
      | black-and-white images are automatically colorized (which
      | works, but which is sometimes hilariously wrong).
      | 
      | As for the sausage, how it is made is interesting, how it
      | tastes is from a PR perspective probably more interesting.
      | And regardless you could argue that anything that differs
      | from an utterly black square is 'not truthful'.
 
      | mensetmanusman wrote:
      | Because light red shifts over time/expansion, you could
      | color these towards blue until they cover parts of the
      | human vision space to what they would look like on earth a
      | billion years ago or so.
      | 
      | In that case you could render the image differently
      | depending on how many millions of years in the past you
      | were interested in.
      | 
      | I.e these used to be human "visible" on earth, but
      | eventually their colors shifted beyond what we can perceive
      | with our eyes.
 
        | s1artibartfast wrote:
        | Many of these images are close and not redshifted.
 
      | throwaway09223 wrote:
      | No, there's none of that. These pictures aren't being used
      | for any kind of science. They're 100% PR pieces, made to
      | look pretty - which is fine!
 
        | ghostpepper wrote:
        | I like to think that these cosmological structures are
        | inherently beautiful the same way abstract mathematics
        | is, and colorizing it is just a way to convey a sense of
        | that beauty to most people who don't speak the language.
 
        | april_22 wrote:
        | Which makes me wonder how all these galaxies and nebulas
        | would look like in real life. Would they look similar to
        | how they colored it? Are those images maybe potraying a
        | completely wrong reality?
 
        | wthomp wrote:
        | If you were to fly into these nebula in some kind of
        | spaceship they wouldn't be any brighter than they appear
        | in the night sky from Earth. They would just look way way
        | bigger. The frustrating thing is that our eyes start to
        | respond differently to colours when the light is really
        | really faint. So we would probably perceive them as a
        | grayish green haze. If the image was brightened
        | artificiallythen we would see it as mostly red, with some
        | browns and blues.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | roywiggins wrote:
        | You can see different images of the Horsehead nebula and
        | the differences in how colors are presented. They vary
        | substantially, but not in any way that matters, at least
        | to me on an aesthetic level. It's more like the
        | difference between different white balances (which are,
        | to some extent and in some contexts, arbitrary) in a
        | terrestrial image.
        | 
        | https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horsehead_Nebula
        | 
        | Maybe one or another of them is more "true to life" but
        | since human eyes never evolved to view this stuff,
        | there's no reason to think that the best and most
        | informative view of an astronomical object is the visible
        | light one.
 
        | ceejayoz wrote:
        | Depends quite a lot on _how_ you look.
        | 
        | If you use an optical telescope to look at the Orion
        | Nebula, you'll see it, but it'll appear pretty much grey.
        | (No scope and it'll be what looks like a bright star,
        | with perhaps a little bit of a blobby nature.) Hook a
        | standard SLR camera up to the telescope and do a long
        | exposure, though, and the reds and blues become readily
        | apparent.
        | 
        | Here's one I took with a standard camera and a 6" scope:
        | https://www.instagram.com/p/CMtHMicBwvI/
 
        | s1artibartfast wrote:
        | Responses to this question are really interesting. I
        | usually take these kinds of evasive non answers in bad
        | faith, thinking that people are refusing to acknowledge
        | the validity of the question.
        | 
        | After some thought, I wonder if it is more an issue of
        | neurodiversity. Perhaps some people cant imagine
        | themselves viewing a celestial object, or can't imagine
        | the desire to do so.
 
        | TheOtherHobbes wrote:
        | There is no "in real life." The size, sensitivity, and
        | spectral response of human eyes is a response to the
        | radiation conditions on Earth, as enhanced by evolution.
        | 
        | If the Sun had been redder or bluer and your eyes were
        | the size of your head or much smaller, everything would
        | look very different.
        | 
        | The Webb images are infrared so "in real life" you'd
        | never see them as shown here. You'd see whatever was
        | visible in optical wavelengths.
        | 
        | This isn't just a quantitative difference. Those science
        | fiction imagined alien worlds covered in little tiny
        | technological lights - just like Earth - are a fantasy.
        | Aliens might see UV instead of optical frequencies, and
        | Earth would look like Venus to them - an opaque planet
        | covered by a thick haze. They might light their spaces
        | with UV, which we wouldn't be able to see so their planet
        | would look dark to us.
        | 
        | And so on.
 
        | s1artibartfast wrote:
        | You are obviously missing the point. They want to know
        | what it would look like to a human observer.
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | It's the wrong question to ask because a 'human observer'
        | would see absolutely nothing. The age of the objects you
        | are looking at is such that you are looking into the past
        | not at something the is still there in the present, so if
        | we were to transport you there you would not recognize
        | the various objects in visible light at all, too much
        | time has passed.
        | 
        | At this level 'distance' = 'time'.
 
        | JacobThreeThree wrote:
        | >a 'human observer' would see absolutely nothing
        | 
        | Although the accuracy of infrared, or other non-visible
        | spectrum digital representations, could be disputed you
        | would definitely see something similar in visible
        | spectrum as compared to infrared, but with much more
        | dust. Most objects that are emitting energy are doing so
        | in many portions of the spectrum.
        | 
        | See this example: https://esahubble.org/images/heic1406c/
 
        | s1artibartfast wrote:
        | This isn't true at all, many of the objects are not far
        | away.
        | 
        | The Carina Nebula (imaged) is 7,500 light years away. It
        | is still there.
        | 
        | It seems like people are going through mental gymnastics
        | to avoid answering the question. If someone asked what a
        | famous black and white photo like _raising the flag_
        | would look like in person, would people give the same
        | nonsense answers? e.g.  "There is no "in real life", "the
        | past cant be seen"
        | 
        | For the Carina Nebula[2] :
        | 
        | "Several filters were used to sample narrow and broad
        | wavelength ranges. The color results from assigning
        | different hues (colors) to each monochromatic (grayscale)
        | image associated with an individual filter. In this case,
        | the assigned colors are: Red: F444W, Orange: F335M,
        | Yellow: F470N, Green: F200W, Cyan: F187N, Blue: F090W"
        | 
        | This is in comparison to the human eye, which sees 630 nm
        | for red, 532 nm for green, and 465 nm for blue light.
        | 
        | That is not to say the Nebula isn't also observable in
        | visible light, you would just be seeing different colors
        | and perhaps features. probably something like this
        | visible spectrum imagine of a different part of the
        | nebula
        | 
        | For the other images, what you would see in person ranges
        | from very similar to nothing depending on the image, and
        | pixel in the image.
        | 
        | [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raising_the_Flag_on_Iwo
        | _Jima
        | 
        | [2] https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/
        | 031/01G...
        | 
        | [3] https://esahubble.org/images/heic0910e/
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | Yes, you're right, for that particular nebula. Of course
        | there are other nearby objects that are interesting in
        | that spectral range. But MIRI really shines when it comes
        | to distant galaxies whose light is so far redshifted that
        | it shows up as deep infrared.
 
        | s1artibartfast wrote:
        | Yes, but even then you can answer the question of what it
        | would look like to the human eye if transported closer
        | and/or back in time.
        | 
        | They would look different, have different colors and
        | features. Galaxies would look more like andromeda as
        | viewed via telescope.
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | What I wouldn't give for a first person view from a
        | planet around a double star... oh well.
 
        | Bud wrote:
        | Whose real life? Some of the aliens can see better than
        | us. ;)
 
      | pkaye wrote:
      | They do have some custom tools that are publicly available.
      | I saw some videos in the past showing how they use those
      | tools along with Photoshop to process images.
 
      | dguest wrote:
      | As others have hinted, the real science is going to be less
      | pretty.
      | 
      | For example, some algorithm might filter the raw images and
      | extract objects matching some properties, fit them, and
      | then run every reasonable manipulation of that filter to
      | give the fit an error bar. Or they will compare spectra
      | from many galaxies to understand their composition, again
      | running every reasonable variation of the calculation to
      | get some kind of uncertainty.
      | 
      | The end science result will be a graph of some kind in a
      | paper, but it costs very little extra to make these
      | beautiful images on the side.
 
      | clint wrote:
      | Photoshop is literally just a matrix transformation engine
      | for data that is highly optimized for ease of use,
      | extensibility, and making visual representations of that
      | data.
 
  | bottled_poe wrote:
  | I'm confused.. why would we expect some other image processing
  | software to be better than Photoshop - a software package which
  | has been the top of its class for ~30 years?
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | yread wrote:
    | Can it even open FITS?
 
      | clint wrote:
      | Yes.
      | https://esahubble.org/projects/fits_liberator/download_v23/
 
    | randyrand wrote:
    | Because photoshop it not open source, not verifiable, and not
    | documented on a scientific level about how its filters
    | behave.
 
      | Hadriel wrote:
      | Eh, it's been pretty tested. Any person can easily apply
      | filters and verify the change in image properties and see
      | how filters behave.
 
      | c048 wrote:
      | Why would they worry about that? These colored images
      | aren't used for science, they're meant for marketing.
 
      | ashes-of-sol wrote:
 
      | MAGZine wrote:
      | They're not doing science with photoshop. They're creating
      | assets for consumption by the public.
 
  | beowulfey wrote:
  | I work with images on the other end of the scale regularly, and
  | amongst scientists it's probably 50:50 Photoshop or ImageJ for
  | editing images like that.
 
  | yread wrote:
  | I would have expected ImageJ has plugins better suited to work
  | on science
 
    | clint wrote:
    | Why would you assume this?
 
      | yread wrote:
      | I work in microscopy and everyone uses it. Precise work
      | with LUTs, images with z-,c- and t- dimensions, image
      | formats, api, ...
 
  | djfobbz wrote:
  | I was wondering the same...why not also share the boring
  | originals that we can process through our own filters?
 
    | _justinfunk wrote:
    | https://mast.stsci.edu/api/v0/index.html
    | 
    | Here's the API to access the boring original data.
 
  | deanCommie wrote:
  | > actual science or some touched up version of objects in our
  | universe.
  | 
  | Here's a mental model that I found particularly beneficial:
  | 
  | All electromagnetic radiation is the same. In the sense that
  | every proton/neutron is the same. But adding a few more
  | protons/neutrons creates an entirely new element, with entirely
  | new chemical properties. From something simple come incredibly
  | new powerful behaviours. So just as Iron is massively different
  | from Plutonium, Microwaves are massively different from Gamma
  | rays.
  | 
  | What we call "visible light" is not particularly special,
  | except to us, and our _specific_ human biology. It feels more
  | real because it 's visible to us, but it's not on the grand
  | scale of the universe.
  | 
  | What we're observing through these telescopes isn't a dog
  | chasing a ball. We're seeing stuff billions of light years
  | away, millions of light years in size, billions of years ago.
  | Passing by trillions of other stars and planets on the way.
  | 
  | These objects are emitting a gargantuan amount of information.
  | Why should we only present the information that happens to be
  | in the same subset as what our primitive primate vision cones
  | can process?
  | 
  | So, no, if you were to teleport to the nebula/galaxy that we're
  | showing images for, it wouldn't look exactly like that to your
  | human eyes. Instead, what you're seeing is what a god with
  | perfect vision of the universe would see. You're seeing the
  | universe for what it is, not just the part of it that is
  | presented to humans.
 
    | penneyd wrote:
    | Very nicely stated.
 
  | GuB-42 wrote:
  | I am not doing astronomy but Photoshop is useful to analyze any
  | kind of image. You can manipulate contrast, apply all sorts of
  | filters, map a color palette, etc... All that using a user-
  | friendly interface. It is very mature software used by millions
  | of people, for general purpose image work, no custom tool will
  | come close.
  | 
  | I guess that scientists will also use specialized software for
  | fine analysis, but it doesn't make Photoshop useless.
 
    | amelius wrote:
    | I'd recommend Fiji; it was developed within a scientific
    | environment; and it is free (unlike PhotoShop).
 
  | Paddywack wrote:
  | I read a detailed interview with the person who does the
  | enhancements a couple of days ago (can't recall where a grrr).
  | 
  | He said: A) there are two of them in the team doing the imaging
  | B) it doesn't start with an image - it's literally heaps of
  | binary data that the scientists stitch together C) he then does
  | the colour overlay based on agreed norms (one colour per input
  | frequency for consistency) D) most of his "touch up" work is
  | getting the colour gradient right between the brightest and
  | dimmer objects - without this a lot of resolution would be lost
  | (brights too bright, or dim not visible).
  | 
  | Hope this helps...
 
  | roywiggins wrote:
  | Webb's primary camera is infrared, so there is by necessity a
  | choice to be made with how to present the data for humans who
  | can't see in infrared.
 
    | whiteboardr wrote:
    | I am aware.
    | 
    | (And have been eagerly waiting for this moment for ages)
    | 
    | It just seems "unscientific" to just use Photoshop and above
    | all curious about the set of rules and algorithms, that
    | enables them to decide which hue to pick for which region,
    | levels, etc.
 
      | mrandish wrote:
      | While Photoshop is widely used in artistic and creative
      | imaging, it also contains a powerful suite of tools for
      | image processing in arbitrary color spaces. I'm not even a
      | serious user and across various hobby projects I've used it
      | for stuff like manipulating 3D depth data and deriving
      | logical bit masks.
      | 
      | Photoshop can do just about anything with spatial image
      | data and if it's not built-in, you can probably find a
      | plug-in to do what you want or write a script. The trade-
      | off is the software can be very complex because over the
      | decades it's grown to support an incredible number of use
      | cases.
      | 
      | Over the years I've also seen PS used in unexpected ways at
      | work. If you need to do something programmatic to image or
      | spatial data, PS is a good host platform for custom code
      | because it will handle importing file formats, color space
      | conversion, bit plane manipulation, alignment, scaling,
      | cropping, perspective correction and masking before your
      | custom processing and then it'll export the output in
      | whatever sizes and formats you need. And it will do it on
      | gigapixel data sets under script control. That's a lot of
      | grunt work you don't have to implement. I've even seen it
      | wired up to Matlab.
 
      | irrational wrote:
      | What tool would you expect them to use instead of
      | Photoshop?
 
        | tsbertalan wrote:
        | NumPy or Matlab. And it's possible the "original image"
        | is multispectral (more than 3 channels), so you need to
        | choose an arbitrary 3-channel projection.
 
      | micromacrofoot wrote:
      | Photoshop is actually more complex than the JWST itself.
      | What makes it "unscientific"? The fact that it's a consumer
      | product?
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | ramraj07 wrote:
      | Not just in astronomy but also in biology, pretty much
      | anyone working with images uses photoshop at least for the
      | final layout. In biology where the rgb overlay is paramount
      | for result interpretation, generally it's frowned upon to
      | play with channels too much.
      | 
      | But when you have 10k x 5k pixel images and channels that
      | don't directly correlate with visual spectrum I don't see
      | why using photoshop extensively is wrong especially for
      | images to be released to the general public. I'm even sure
      | some local touch up is acceptable for me.
 
      | vishnugupta wrote:
      | The person seen photoshopping very briefly talked about how
      | he picks different colours for different region/light-
      | frequency. But yes, more details will definitely be
      | helpful. Also I guess they could open-source the untouched
      | photos for other artists and photoshop experts to play
      | around?
 
        | empyrrhicist wrote:
        | They aren't "untouched photos" in any traditional sense,
        | but rather raw data. To visualize astronomical phenomena
        | always requires processing/compositing. For that matter,
        | traditional cameras on earth automate many of the same
        | tasks being done here in Photoshop via debayering.
 
        | roywiggins wrote:
        | They did with Hubble:
        | 
        | https://hla.stsci.edu/
        | 
        | This article goes through processing a Hubble image of
        | one of the same objects that Webb did today and includes
        | an example of what it looks like before adjusting for
        | contrast and tone.
        | 
        | https://www.rocketstem.org/2015/04/20/how-astronomers-
        | proces...
 
        | pkaye wrote:
        | All the untouched images will be available in the MAST
        | archives which is where the Hubble data is also
        | available. (https://archive.stsci.edu/)
 
        | dguest wrote:
        | Everything will be public eventually.
        | 
        | There's a bit on the data policy on wikipedia [1] but
        | basically the operations costs are funded (in part) by
        | people paying for telescope time. The project that is
        | currently paying for the telescope gets exclusive access
        | for a 1 year "embargo" period, after which the data
        | becomes public.
        | 
        | [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Webb_Space_Teles
        | cope#Gro...
 
        | wthomp wrote:
        | Small correction, no one will be able to pay for time on
        | JWST. But if you put in a proposal for time and it's
        | accepted, they will pay _you_. That 's to make sure there
        | is sufficient funds available to properly make use of the
        | data you proposed for.
 
        | dguest wrote:
        | Actually that's sort of a large correction, thanks for
        | pointing that out. Isn't it a bit of an inversion of the
        | norm in astrophysics? I'd thought many grants included
        | money for telescope time.
 
      | DiogenesKynikos wrote:
      | Any real science will be done on the raw images, not on the
      | color composites released for the public.
      | 
      | These color composite images really show off how awesome
      | JWST is. They're meant for the public to enjoy (astronomers
      | enjoy them too).
 
    | shitpostbot wrote:
    | I had always assumed they were doing it completely
    | mathematically though. Like collating spectrometry readings
    | to know what elements were present where and figuring out the
    | temperature for blackbody emission or something, or even just
    | linearly transforming the raw data from the spectrum the
    | telescope can receive to the visible spectrum.
    | 
    | Kinda disappointing if it's really just a paint by numbers
    | Photoshop to look nice
 
      | bowsamic wrote:
      | No it's done by hand with artistic license
 
    | Wowfunhappy wrote:
    | But, the inferred data is supposed to help us determine what
    | I might see if I could teleport there (and time travel, not
    | die, etc)--right?
 
      | [deleted]
 
      | empyrrhicist wrote:
      | You'd have a tough time defining "there" in images like
      | this, and your eyes are not evolved to see faint, diffuse,
      | glowing gas structures in the infrared.
 
| charxyz wrote:
| Is there an easy way to just scroll through the images?
 
  | advantager wrote:
  | https://webbtelescope.org/news/first-images/gallery
 
  | eutropia wrote:
  | I kinda love this comment. It highlights the absurd dichotomy
  | between what "experts" see and what "lay people" see when they
  | look at the same thing.
  | 
  | Parent just wants to see some cool images from Earth's latest
  | and greatest space telescope, preferably in a convenient way.
  | 
  | Astrophysicists from NASA, ESA, et al. are hanging off the data
  | and details from every last photon collected - each one having
  | traveled billions of years from their origin deep in the past
  | of our universe.
  | 
  | With every point of light in the images, the instruments on
  | Webb and associated computer analysis here on earth analyze
  | each facet of the spectra, inferring the chemical composition
  | of galaxies we may have never even seen before as a species -
  | calculating how much spacetime expanded in the long and lonely
  | journey of those photons hurtling through our universe for
  | billions of years, path bent by warping gravity fields,
  | colliding and remitting from galactic dust to finally arrive at
  | a superchilled mirror segment more than a million miles from
  | earth.
  | 
  | But hey, can we just get a scrollable feed of these in a web-
  | optimized image format?
  | 
  | [ edit: I guess it wasn't clear -- I genuinely love the
  | question. I'm not being sarcastic. YES obviously people want to
  | look at the images and get excited from press release - YES
  | obviously scientists are using a different data stream and not
  | the press release site. What's really cool is that the same
  | origin (12.5 hours of observing a tiny spec of sky) can be used
  | for both. And genuinely the absurd dichotomy is funny, and
  | cool. I guess there's so much sneering elitism on HN that it's
  | easy to get lumped into the same boat. ]
 
    | canjobear wrote:
    | This is a press release website. The scientists interested in
    | every individual photon aren't browsing this site or anything
    | like it to find their data. The entire point of this site is
    | to look cool and generate excitement, so yes, it should be
    | scrollable and web-optimized.
 
    | dylan604 wrote:
    | Yeah? And? So?
    | 
    | If it's the pretty pictures that gets people interested, then
    | show them the pretty pictures. We all paid for it, so let us
    | see them.
 
    | toombowoombo wrote:
    | Why should these two be mutually exclusive?
    | 
    | Even within research projects we wish to find well organised
    | datsets.
    | 
    | Asking about scrollable images seems to be a fair question to
    | me, especially in the context of a press release.
 
  | CorpOverreach wrote:
  | NASA's website gives a much easier view of the pictures:
  | https://www.nasa.gov/webbfirstimages
 
    | leephillips wrote:
    | Thank you. The linked website is horrendous.
 
  | exhilaration wrote:
  | I hate linking to a non-NASA site but the New York Times makes
  | it really easy to just scroll through: https://nyti.ms/3ALiTQi
 
  | cvoss wrote:
  | Would highly recommend spending time gazing at each one in full
  | resolution. The deep field in particular is underwhelming until
  | you look at it as closely as possible. Then it becomes
  | extraordinarily spectacular.
 
  | dylan604 wrote:
  | Give it some time, and NASA will definitely get a gallery where
  | imagery can be viewed in a more friendly browsing experience.
  | These are the astro-imagery equivalent of "hot off the
  | presses". They just haven't had time, nor enough content, to
  | get a full gallery up yet. All of the other platforms have
  | these types of galleries, so just a bit more patience is needed
  | from all of us while the JWST gets to work! (I'm sitting on my
  | hands trying to be patient myself)
 
  | Tagbert wrote:
  | Try this https://webbtelescope.org/resource-gallery/images
 
  | icey wrote:
  | There's a feed on Flickr
  | https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasawebbtelescope/with/5221053...
 
| matesz wrote:
| Not to spoil anything, but anybody else here finding these
| results quite underwelming?
 
  | Jorchime wrote:
  | Hubbles pictures were probably new to you, so in a sense this
  | is "just" an iteration. I think you just had the
  | perspective/expectation that this will be new as well. Maybe a
  | bit much for the very first public results of a scientific
  | experiment.
 
  | twojacobtwo wrote:
  | I'm super curious how you could find these underwhelming. My
  | mind is blown just scrolling across each of the images.
  | 
  | What exactly were you expecting from them?
 
    | matesz wrote:
    | I agree, not only pictures are amazing, but the idea that is
    | actually works, just crazy.
    | 
    | I ment more in the context of images taken by Hubble
    | telescope - you know, all the hype. 25 years of work, 40mln
    | hours worked, billions spent. Pictures are better than
    | hubbles, but not by orders of magnitude, which is what I
    | expected. That's why underwhelming.
 
  | ceejayoz wrote:
  | I think that'll depend how much you read.
  | 
  | If you look only at the picture, it's gonna be hard to tell
  | versus, say,
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubble_Deep_Field#/media/File:...
  | for the deep-field shot or
  | https://hubblesite.org/contents/media/images/2007/16/2099-Im...
  | for the Carina Nebula shot.
  | 
  | If you read the details, the fact that JWST can resolve much
  | dimmer light sources much more quickly than Hubble ever had a
  | hope of should be fairly compelling from a "how much science
  | can we do?" standpoint.
 
  | nullc wrote:
  | Compared to what? They surely blow away my astrophotos! :P
  | 
  | Things like looking for IR spectra of water vapor in the
  | atmosphere of planets outside of our solar system we can't even
  | do from earth, since our own atmosphere is not transparent at
  | those wavelengths due to the water in it. (ditto for oxygen).
  | 
  | A thing they mentioned in the presentation today but mostly
  | only in passing, was that images like that deep field image
  | were captured with only something like a dozen hours of data
  | collection and had better resolution and much better SNR and
  | many more far redshift objects visible at all than an image of
  | the same scene that took Hubble weeks of data collection to
  | make.
 
  | willis936 wrote:
  | A mass spec of a galaxy 13.1 Bn years ago is pretty amazing and
  | informs new answers to the biggest questions of the universe.
  | 
  | None of these images really stretch the legs of the instrument
  | either. A hot jupiter is not an interesting exoplanet. It's a
  | taste.
 
  | omegalulw wrote:
  | Have you seen overlay comparisons to Hubble? The detail is
  | significantly improved.
 
| FailMore wrote:
| THIS IS SOOOO AWESOME. So happy to be alive with this happening!
 
| Dopameaner wrote:
| I didnt realize we had a 3d map of dark matter. Something to be
| mindful of now.
| 
| Gathered the summary from the Royal Observatory's website[1]
| regarding Hubble's major contributions
| 
| " - Helped pin down the age for the universe now known to be 13.8
| billion years, roughly three times the age of Earth.
| 
| - Discovered two moons of Pluto, Nix and Hydra.
| 
| - Helped determine the rate at which the universe is expanding.
| 
| - Discovered that nearly every major galaxy is anchored by a
| black hole at the centre.
| 
| - Created a 3-D map of dark matter."
 
| crhulls wrote:
| Here is a Hubble side by side of the deep field for comparison
| 
| https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10159217085846758&se...
 
  | systemvoltage wrote:
  | This makes the Hubble telescope even more impressive in my
  | eyes. Built 50 years ago with presumably 60 year old tech.
  | 
  | > Hubble telescope was funded and built in the 1970s by the
  | United States space agency NASA with contributions from the
  | European Space Agency. Its intended launch was 1983, but the
  | project was beset by technical delays, budget problems, and the
  | 1986 Challenger disaster. Hubble was finally launched in 1990.
 
  | mike10921 wrote:
  | Ok to be honest I know it's not cool to admit it, but so far it
  | all looks the same. If someone told me that the Webb picture
  | was taken by Hubble I would not have thought about it for an
  | extra second.
  | 
  | I'm hoping that in the future we see pictures of locations and
  | environments that are mind-blowing to the average person who
  | loves space.
 
    | mrandish wrote:
    | These are just the initial "pretty pictures" processed to
    | look nice and promoted as part of NASA's ongoing fundraising.
    | The more valuable science payload is in the spectral data
    | which will tell us about the composition of these objects.
    | Another exciting aspect of of JWST is the IR instrument
    | (NIRCAM) which can see red shifted wavelengths revealing much
    | older objects from the early universe.
    | 
    | To me, the real 'shock and awe' will be when scientific
    | papers are published which reveal new knowledge and deeper
    | understanding of our universe. This will take some time
    | although I'm sure the first papers are already racing toward
    | pre-print.
 
    | ceejayoz wrote:
    | The difference is in a) the details and b) the length of time
    | the telescope has to gather light to get the photo. JWST got
    | the photo in hours when Hubble took weeks, and there's easily
    | 10x as many objects in the JWST shot.
    | 
    | JWST can thus observe much fainter and much more distant
    | objects - galaxies billions of years old, exoplanets, etc.,
    | and it can do _more of it_.
 
      | patwolf wrote:
      | If they pointed JWST somewhere for weeks instead of hours,
      | would it pick up even more objects, or is it hitting the
      | limit to what exists in that part of space?
 
        | ceejayoz wrote:
        | You might be able to see some additional fainter objects,
        | but the deep field shot is looking at 13 billion year old
        | galaxies - some of the first in existence. There's not
        | much older you can look at.
 
      | mike10921 wrote:
      | Of course, I get it, but we are allowed to admit that to
      | the average person so far it looks like more of the same.
 
        | hellomyguys wrote:
        | The idea that this looks the same to the average person
        | is insane to me. What aspect of these two photos looks
        | the same?
 
        | joshuahedlund wrote:
        | Yes, we can admit it for some of the images, like the
        | first one (crisper details and new galaxies
        | notwithstanding). Some of them are pretty stunning in the
        | improvement, though, IMO:
        | 
        | - Carina Nebulae: https://old.reddit.com/r/space/comments
        | /vxengq/carina_nebula...
        | 
        | - Southern Ring Nebulae: https://old.reddit.com/r/space/c
        | omments/vxfdva/hastily_throw...
        | 
        | The new ones make the old ones look blurry and dull!
 
        | ceejayoz wrote:
        | I'm honestly not sure how you someone can look at those
        | two photos side-by-side and think they're the same.
        | Hubble's is like slapping a 360p cam rip on a 4k TV.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | capableweb wrote:
        | Unless you know what you're looking at, most if not
        | everything looks mundane. It's only with perspective that
        | we can grasp the beauty of things like these, or just
        | other things, like ants.
        | 
        | To most people, ants are just an annoying bug. But to
        | scientists (and curious non-scientists), ants are
        | endlessly fascinating creatures. Together with scientists
        | who speak to "common folk", even they can understand the
        | beauty in how ants work.
        | 
        | That's why outreach and education is so important. And
        | sometimes the beauty doesn't come from the direct thing
        | (like these images, although I'd argue they are beautiful
        | by themselves too) but from the indirect implication of
        | the thing (time to acquire the picture, the data gathered
        | to "draw" the picture, the community for even enabling
        | this picture from being drawn and so on).
 
        | bowsamic wrote:
        | What are you expecting to see exactly? Aliens?
 
      | pavon wrote:
      | > JWST got the photo in hours when Hubble took weeks.
      | 
      | For this image, Hubble only had 1.7 hours of exposure while
      | JWST had 12.5 hours.
      | 
      | More details: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32074989
 
    | loudmax wrote:
    | I kind of agree with you, these pictures do look like more of
    | the same. But that's okay, the real exciting stuff isn't
    | going to be pretty pictures, it's going to be what
    | astronomers and physicists are able to learn by peering deep
    | into the origins of the universe. The pictures of galaxies
    | are nice to look at, but the real ramifications of JWST will
    | take years to play out.
 
    | jacquesm wrote:
    | The very rough equivalent in computer terms: a 1997 PC
    | computing something and taking a week or so to do it and
    | returning the answer: 3.
    | 
    | The same by the 2022 version: 3.14159265358979323846 in a few
    | milliseconds.
    | 
    | Both the speed of the computation and the resolution of the
    | result are what makes it impressive, not the fact that the
    | nature of the universe does not change fundamentally when
    | viewed across a longer span of time.
    | 
    | It is mind-blowing, but maybe not to the 'average person who
    | loves space'. But if you stop for a bit longer to understand
    | what it took to create that image and what it is that you are
    | actually looking at (the age of the objects involved, their
    | apparent size and the resolving power and temperature of the
    | telescope required to make it) it becomes a lot more
    | impressive.
 
      | mike10921 wrote:
      | Understood, i've been following this forever and am super
      | excited to see where it takes us. I'm just saying we are
      | allowed to admit that to us these pictures look like more
      | of the same despite knowing that they are very much not.
 
        | jacquesm wrote:
        | To me they do not and I am probably also an 'average
        | person who loves space', in fact I'm blown away by the
        | results on display here and it is way beyond my
        | expectations. From a tech perspective this is humanity at
        | its peak.
 
  | throwaway5752 wrote:
  | My understanding is that it is also 12-13 hours of exposure for
  | the Webb image vs weeks for Hubble.
 
    | pavon wrote:
    | That is incorrect. The famous Hubble Ultra Deep Field
    | image[1] took 11.3 days of imaging spread over four months
    | (because of high demand to use Hubble). However, that is a
    | different part of the sky. The Hubble image shown here was
    | taken as part of RELICS[2], a survey of images to find good
    | candidates for JWST to image, and was only exposed for 1.7
    | hours (5 orbits at ~20 minutes each), compared to JWST's
    | exposure time of 12.5 hours. So comparisons between between
    | Hubble and JWST for that particular shot are not fair to
    | Hubble.
    | 
    | [1]https://esahubble.org/images/heic0611b/
    | 
    | [2]https://archive.stsci.edu/prepds/relics/
 
  | kzrdude wrote:
  | Right and it's slightly rotated, 20-30 degrees (guess). Just
  | for others that try to line them up
 
  | quaintdev wrote:
  | A GIF comparing both Hubble and JWST
  | https://i.redd.it/9uyhwijeo0b91.gif
 
    | ehsankia wrote:
    | Here's another tool with all 4 photos:
    | 
    | https://johnedchristensen.github.io/WebbCompare/
 
    | bdefore wrote:
    | The additional detail of the red spiral galaxy around 12:30
    | is stark by comparison to others. Any ideas on why?
 
      | nacogo wrote:
      | The reddest objects in the JWST are frequently not even
      | present in the Hubble image, as they were redshifted into a
      | band of light Hubble couldn't even detect. That's my
      | favorite part about this image - those galaxies we can now
      | see which were previously redshifted beyond our capacity to
      | detect. They're the oldest, and receding from us the
      | fastest.
 
    | wolfd wrote:
    | I made this page (posted in another thread yesterday) because
    | I was rather underwhelmed by the .gif. I think the page shows
    | in much better detail the difference between the telescopes'
    | capabilities.
    | 
    | https://blog.wolfd.me/hubble-jwst/
    | 
    | (If you're on mobile, you should be able to zoom in and still
    | use the slider)
 
      | fatbas202 wrote:
      | This is really awesome. Thank you!
 
      | emptyfile wrote:
      | Great stuff!
 
      | april_22 wrote:
      | damn, this is really awesome!!
 
      | nabakin wrote:
      | Interested in adding the Carina Nebula comparison? I'm
      | crop-aligning the full resolution images rn and will have
      | them in a bit
      | 
      | Edit: btw you should add the ability to zoom on desktop
      | too. Would make it a lot easier to see the massive
      | difference between the two
 
| 323 wrote:
| I am confused because I thought it was an infrared telescope?
| 
| Are these images as received, or are they frequency shifted post
| processed into the visible range?
 
  | dougmwne wrote:
  | Yes, they are frequency shifted. Many telescope images are in
  | false color. I can understand that we are interested in visible
  | light since that's most within our experience, but the human
  | eye was not evolved for the astronomical and universal so we
  | need some help. Frequency shifting is a tool just like a lens.
 
  | clint wrote:
  | Humans cannot see infrared light
 
  | airstrike wrote:
  | Did you expect 100% black jpgs all around?
 
  | brandmeyer wrote:
  | I don't know which filters were used to generate these
  | mediagenic images, but you can see the available filters here:
  | https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/jwst-near-infrared-camera/nircam...
  | 
  | Note that the "colors" used in that graphic are also false,
  | since only F070W and F090W are in the human eyeball's passband.
 
  | whimsicalism wrote:
  | Almost all images are frequency shifted, often just to what
  | makes things look cool. Still makes it cool IMO!
 
  | willis936 wrote:
  | As others have said: there is frequency shifting done. However,
  | it is important to know that distant galaxies are red shifted
  | making the visible spectrum be in IR. In the case of JWST the
  | frequency shifted images may be close to the non-redshifted
  | visible spectrum.
 
  | layer8 wrote:
  | It's just your monitor doesn't support infrared color space and
  | therefore shows the wrong colors. ;)
 
| dangerwill wrote:
 
| samstave wrote:
| Need to get new Phil Mosbey prints of this on hex prints.
| 
| (Phil mosbey is the astro-photographer who made the hex print of
| JWT which nasa bought and placed in lobby (if you havent seen his
| space calandar, its amazing.)
| 
| he grew up with my younger brother, and I have some art/prints in
| my house of his.
| 
| -
| 
| Although, I agree with some other folks ; Why cant we point
| Hubble or JWT at the planets in our solar system, or the closest
| objects to us.
| 
| The deep-field view of both hubble and JWT are wonderful, but
| whats the diff on pointing it to closer objects.
| 
| --
| 
| Further, /noStupidQuestions: Why at out level of tech and the
| fact that all of these projects are funded by tax money (as a
| portion) can we not have live streaming (even if high latency)
| from all such projects?
| 
| What is the national security preventing us from having a space
| (or any other) telescope funded by public taxes from having the
| ability to see what it sees, even if with reasonable delay...
| 
| Wouldn't it be interesting to bounty analysis from such ;
| 
| Basically, allow for arm-chair amateur space-folks-ham-radio-
| style to do submit findings for bounties on discoveries?
 
| skilled wrote:
| I hope someone from NASA will read this or perhaps someone can
| forward this message, but all we want (mere mortal humans) is
| quick access to the direct links to the highest resolution
| images.
| 
| From what I can tell it takes anywhere from 5 (if you know what
| you're doing) to 10 clicks (once you understand the UI) to find
| all the links for a -singular- image.
| 
| Thanks nonetheless.
 
  | dzikimarian wrote:
  | This is pretty easy option
  | 
  | https://webbtelescope.org/news/news-releases?Collection=Firs...
  | 
  | 1. Pick subject 2. Pick image which interests you (bottom) 3.
  | Pick resolution you need (left sidebar)
 
| tempaccount2022 wrote:
| cool
 
| bdefore wrote:
| All the additional detail in the nebulae shots in particular!
| 
| What's resonating with me today: As a web dev, I cannot imagine
| the feeling of so much dedication and effort from so many people
| finally unfolding to release after 30 years. One moonshot longer
| than full careers. Some of those responsible (hundreds?
| thousands?) retired or no longer with us. What a sacrifice, and
| what an achievement.
 
| uhtred wrote:
| So if they point this thing at an exoplanet and it has advanced
| life will we see a picture much the same as when we see a photo
| of earth taken from the space station? i.e. city lights etc?
 
  | boriskourt wrote:
  | Already answered in sibling:
  | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32072067
 
| Shadonototra wrote:
| This website is one of the worst i ever seen
| 
| Low res pictures on announcement day
| 
| fire this web dev
 
  | guerrilla wrote:
  | Seriously, very frustrating and almost anxiety-provoking.
 
    | drewcon wrote:
    | Hi res downloads are available on the left side rail.
 
  | Hikikomori wrote:
  | > Full Res, 14575 X 8441, TIF (136.99 MB)
  | 
  | If this is low res then what is high res?
 
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2022-07-12 23:00 UTC)