HomeAstronomyThe James Webb Space Telescope gets its own micrometeoroid forecast — here's...

The James Webb Space Telescope gets its own micrometeoroid forecast — here’s how

Even as the James Webb Space Telescope is allowing astronomers to see inside vast, distant galaxies, it’s also studying some tiny, nearby objects — albeit inadvertently.

These are micrometeoroids, tiny mysteries zipping through the solar system at lightning speed. They’re far too small for scientists to observe directly in deep space, but they shouldn’t be ignored: Micrometeoroids can pack quite a punch, as NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST or Webb) can attest. Since JWST’s Christmas 2021 launch, engineers have detected more than 20 micrometeoroid impacts to the telescope; only one noticeably hurt the observatory. The mission is adjusting its operations to reduce the frequency of micrometeoroid hits, but still, the impacts themselves are perhaps the least expected data from the powerhouse new observatory.

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