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Wikipedia dicit:

In 2019, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope celebrated the full mechanical and electrical assembly of the world’s largest, most powerful space science observatory ever built. Webb’s two halves have been physically put together and its wiring harnesses and electrical interfaces have been connected.

Following assembly, the Webb team moved on to successfully send deployment and tensioning commands to all five layers of its sunshield, which is designed to protect the observatory’s mirrors and scientific instruments from light and heat, primarily from the Sun.

Ensuring mission success for an observatory of this scale and complexity is a challenging endeavor. All of the telescope’s major components have been tested individually through simulated environments they would encounter during launch, and while orbiting a million miles away from Earth. Now that Webb is fully assembled, it must meet rigorous observatory-level standards. The complete spacecraft reacts and performs differently to testing environments than when its components are tested individually.

Following Webb’s successful sunshield deployment and tensioning test, team members have nearly finished the long process of perfectly folding the sunshield back into its stowed position for flight, which occupies a much smaller space than when it is fully deployed. Then, the observatory will be subjected to comprehensive electrical tests and one more set of mechanical tests that emulate the launch acoustic and vibration environment, followed by one final deployment and stowing cycle on the ground, before its flight into space. The James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled to launch in 2021.

Video credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md./Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET): Technical Support/Michael McClare (KBRwyle): Videographer/Sophia Roberts (AIMM): Videographer/Michael P. Menzel (AIMM): Video Editor

 

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