How NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Could Spot Earth-like Planets

JWST Art
Artist's conception of JWST searching for habitable exoplanets. (Image credit: NASA)

The James Webb Space Telescope has been in the news a lot lately. Often referred to as the replacement for the Hubble Space Telescope, its existence has been in jeopardy since a House committee voted to cut its funding this summer. While the telescope promises to revolutionize space science, its expanding budget has caused politicians and others to wonder if the promised returns justify the cost.

The JWST is not merely an upgraded version of Hubble. Rather than measure visible or ultraviolet light like Hubble does, JWST will detect infrared wavelengths from 0.6 (orange light) to 28 micrometers (deep infrared radiation of about 100 K, about minus 173 degrees Celsius or minus 280 degrees Fahrenheit).

Because JWST will be looking for heat, the telescope has to be kept very cold, and shielded from radiation coming from the sun, Earth and moon. To keep the telescope's temperature down to 40 degrees Kelvin (minus 233 C or minus 388 F), JWST will have a large sunshield and will orbit the sun at Lagrange Point 2.

The orbit of JWST will be 930,000 miles (1,500,000 kilometers) from the Earth, nearly 4 times farther than the distance between the Earth and the moon. The balance of gravitational forces from the Earth and sun at the L2 point will keep JWST in a stable orbit without having to expend much energy. However, this great distance also means servicing or repairing the telescope after launch may not be possible. [Photos: Building the James Webb Space Telescope]

"JWST's complexity, with large deployable optics and other systems operating at 40 K in an environment precluding any repair or servicing missions, has probably created one of the world's most complex and expensive integration and test programs," Michael Kaplan, NASA's first Program Executive for the James Webb Space Telescope program, wrote recently in The Space Review. While this testing protocol a part of the ballooning budget, the Independent Comprehensive Review Panel Report, issued in late 2010, said the main problem was that the necessary development costs had not been properly estimated, and the budget therefore had been unrealistic.

Five years ago, the project was estimated to cost 2.4 billion dollars, but the latest reports peg the total at closer to 8.7 billion. This July, the House of Representatives' appropriations committee on Commerce, Justice, and Science moved to cancel the project by taking $1.9 billion out of NASA's 2012 budget. Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski is now the project's main defender in Congress, since, as is the case with Hubble, the Science and Operations Center for JWST is the Baltimore-based Space Telescope Science Institute. (JWST development is led by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, and the telescope is being built by Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems for NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency.)

While Congress deliberates the issue, NASA administrator Charlie Bolden said JWST is one of the agency's top priorities. He added that NASA needed to look across all its programs to find funding for JWST as well as its other two priorities: sending commercial crews to the ISS, and developing the next generation space shuttle: the Space Launch System (SLS).

Due to the size of the budget, the journal Nature called JWST "the telescope that ate astronomy." Yet even if JWST is canceled, the money won't be given to other astronomical projects — instead, under the recommendations of the House appropriations committee, the funding would be entirely eliminated from NASA's budget.

As of this writing an estimated $3.5 billion has been spent on the JWST project, with about three-fourths of the construction and testing completed. If JWST is not canceled by Congress, it is scheduled to launch in 2018 on the European Space Agency's Ariane 5 rocket.

The goal of the JWST is to search for the first stars and galaxies that formed after the Big Bang, and study the formation and evolution of galaxies, stars, and planetary systems. According to Matt Mountain, director of the Space Telescope Science Institute, and John Grunsfeld, former NASA astronaut and STScI deputy director, JWST also will be able to search for and study planets orbiting distant stars in a way that no other telescope can. Astrobiology Magazine editor Leslie Mullen recently talked with Mountain and Grunsfeld about what JWST could reveal about habitable worlds in our galaxy.

Leslie Mullen: The James Webb Space Telescope should be able to find exoplanets, and now there's talk that a star shade could extend this capability. Could you tell me more about that?

Matt Mountain: The whole idea with the star shade is, once we get James Webb up there and working, then you can launch the star shade and it floats in front of it, a hundred thousand miles away from us. It's an autonomous vehicle that you keep lined up.

Mullen: Can you explain what the star shade actually does?

Mountain: It's like putting your thumb in front of the Sun — it creates a shadow. It's very carefully shaped, so you don't get the sort of flaring that you normally get when you use a perfect sphere, where you get all these rings and refractions. These petals are designed to create a very smooth, very deep shadow. You basically slide in and out of the shadow, and then you can actually see the planet next to the star. The star is in the shadow, and the planet peeks around the shadow.

Mullen: You can see any sort of planets with that?

Mountain: Any planet that's within 1 AU, like a habitable zone, or [farther] out.

John Grunsfeld: James Webb is sold as studying galaxies, but I think its greatest discovery may be a habitable Earth-like exoplanet. That's what's going to blow everybody away.

Mullen: So you'd be able to directly image a terrestrial planet, which has never been done before?

Grunsfeld: Exactly. But it wouldn't be like a Rand McNally map, it would be a spot. But because you'd see a spot, we can then do a spectrum of that spot.

Mountain: You'd actually get a color. If it's like Earth, it'll look blue.

Grunsfeld: And, if you had enough time, and there were seasons, with ice covering and then going away, you could study it and be able to tell the difference between winter and summer on the planet, or vegetation, in principle. Just from unresolved single pixels, because of the color changes.

Mountain: Or you could tell it is rotating.

Mullen: Is there a limit to the kinds of stars JWST can target for planet searches?

Mountain: You can only look at stars out to a certain distance, to about 10 or 20 parsecs. But that's ok, because the planets [farther out] are too faint anyway. Any farther away and we can't differentiate them, both the planet and the star will be hidden by the star shade.

Mullen: Could James Webb confirm the exoplanet candidates discovered with the Kepler space telescope?

Mountain: Not the Kepler set, because they're all very distant.

Mullen: They're not within 10 to 20 parsecs?

Grunsfeld: They picked them not because they were close to Earth, but in a sense because they were far away. Not all of them, but in that one field [where Kepler looks], there were lots and lots of stars. And you say why didn't they point toward the center of the Milky Way galaxy, but that's too many stars. So their Goldilocks Zone is the number of stars in their field of view that was just about right so they can study 150,000 stars in one go. In order to see the nearest thousand stars around Earth, you have to look in all directions, because they're spherically all around us.

NASA engineer Ernie Wright looks on as the first six flight-ready James Webb Space Telescope's primary mirror segments are prepped for final cryogenic testing at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. (Image credit: NASA/MSFC/David Higginbotham)

Mullen: And James Webb will be able to see that whole sphere?

Mountain: Yes, over the course of a year it can sample the entire sphere and can sample tens of possible habitable stars: 20, 30, 40. You can search the nearest 20 to 30 solar systems, and based on current assumptions there is a significant likelihood you could find 5 Earth-like planets. You can make 9 to 10 repeat observations, which will be needed to confirm 5 Earth-like planets.

Grunsfeld: But here's the key, and this is what James Webb can uniquely do. Let's say these cubesats[small satellites designed to hunt for exoplanets] identify in the hundred or so stars that are close to us, based on transits[when a planet passes in front of its star], Earth-sized planets in habitable zones around those stars. That's all we can learn. We may be able to learn how far away they are from their parent star, their mass and diameter. Those are all good things. And you say, gosh, that looks a lot like Earth. But does it have oceans? Does it have an atmosphere? Are there any chemical signs of interest there? That's where James Webb comes in, and that's what James Webb will be able to do with or without a star shade for a subset. The star shade expands that remarkably. It allows you to see the atmosphere of planets that are orbiting nearby stars.

Mountain: We've already shown with the modeling that if there's a SuperEarth with the right orientation, where the planet transits the star, we can detect liquid water. You can look at the spectra for water in the atmosphere and other things.

Mullen: Why can JWST see only a subset of planets, but you need a star shade for the others?

Grunsfeld: You can do atmospheric transmission from a transit. Now, what if it's not transiting? Then what do you do? James Webb needs a star shade for those others.

Mountain: If you think of it geometrically, the orientation's got to be right. If you do the statistics, you'll measure a transit for 5 to 7 percent of stars. Well, 5 to 7 percent is already a small number, and there's a small number of Earth-like planets, and a small number of those will be in the habitable zone. But what you really want to do is a census of all the nearby stars, and take spectra directly, independent of the orientation. The star shade enables that.

Mullen: It seems one of the difficulties of JWST is the technology that needed to be developed beyond what had been done for previous telescopes.

Mountain: The technology has all been going really well. One of the most challenging things was the mirrors. Each individual mirror on James Webb is close to Hubble. We have all the mirrors. Half of them are in boxes, and they're all ready to roll.

Mullen: The James Webb telescope is projected to cost about 8.7 billion. How much did Hubble cost?

Grunsfeld: About 6 billion in today's dollars, not including the science operations. James Webb started in earnest in about year 2000, and it'll take about 15 years to complete, and then test and launch. Hubble started in 1975, and it took about 15 years to assemble, test and launch. Hubble is 26,500 pounds, and James Webb is about half of that, but more complex. To build something brand-new, technologically advanced, pushing the envelope in its time, it'll cost a quantum unit, and if you want to repeat that experience, inflating to current-year dollars, if it costs vastly different, more or less, you either have a breakthrough, which everyone will then want to figure out why it cost so little, or you're doing something wrong. And I think the miraculous thing about James Webb is, it's much harder than Hubble. It has to operate close to absolute zero, 40 Kelvin, a million kilometers from Earth, not in Earth orbit, it can't be fixed, and it doesn't fit in the rocket it launches on — it has to unfold when it gets there.

Mullen: I worry about it not unfolding properly after launch. That's always a risk for these space missions, isn't it?

Mountain: Those technologies are the ones we inherited from industry. There's no way you can launch a 19-meter antenna. But you need two 19-meter antennas if you want to transmit HDTV and internet from geostationary orbit, where you make real money. Such deployable antennas are the provenance for the star-shade technology. For JWST it's this plus a whole raft of large deployable technologies aerospace companies use.

Grunsfeld: And of course, everybody needs HDTV. CNN reported that this year, the television rights for advertising just for college basketball exceeded NASA's budget. The rights for college football is much more. So what are our priorities? When you heard about bank bailouts and these kinds of things, we could have fleets of James Webbs for the AIG bail-out. Obviously that was a national priority to prevent collapse — or at least that was the story — but those were very big numbers, and these are very small numbers.

Mullen: Would you ever want James Webb to have commercial partners?

Mountain: No, it's just a government project.

Mullen: But why not? Seems everything in space is going commercial these days.

Mountain: What is James Webb for? It's pure science. It's part of the scientific endeavor. It's like Hubble. Hubble was paid for by the taxpayer. How many kids did we turn on to science because they saw a great Hubble picture? In Hubble we make two discoveries a day. People shouldn't be paying for those images because the taxpayer already paid for it upfront.

Grunsfeld: The whole point is, right now the commercial space industry for human spaceflight, or even commercial orbital transportation of cargo for human space flight at NASA, it's almost fully subsidized by NASA. Companies are saying it's commercial. But none of them would exist if it wasn't for NASA putting money up front. Not tens of dollars, but hundreds of millions of dollars. And the reason is, and this commercial drive is, the hope that they will spur on industries that are subsidized.

And so for instance, the companies that are building James Webb Space Telescope, NASA is paying them to build it, and NASA is paying the other companies to develop technologies for James Webb Space Telescope, and it's to do pure science. It's to discover an Earth-like planet around nearby stars, to discover the very first stars that ever formed in the universe — these incredible things.

What does that do for us? Well, for the company that's building it, when they go to build the next communications satellite, or the next spy satellite, or the next commercial satellite for something else, they have all that expertise now that allows them to build it that otherwise they would not have been able to invest in. Because they weren't trying hard things. If the United States doesn't try to do hard things and really interesting things, all we're going to end up with is college basketball, professional sports, entertainment, and service [industries].

Mountain: And the other thing is, it inspires people to say, "Do you want to work on the telescope that's going to find the first life?" It doesn't matter if you work for NASA or a commercial company, that gets the engineers interested. The company brings in very smart people, and what's more, they can talk about what they do. Because when they're working on a spy satellite, they can't even tell their kids what they do. But to be able to tell their kids and their spouses that they are working on the forefront that's going to change the world ... the companies always tell you they're incredibly proud to be associated with these missions.

And they even occasionally make money. They're getting a huge return on their investment. Congress several years ago worked out that for every dollar invested in space science, 7 dollars got returned to the US economy over a period of 20 years, from the sheer technology flow. In Europe they made a similar calculation, that for every dollar they invested in big science in Europe, roughly 3 to 4 dollars got returned to the European economy over the same period because of the improvements.

You know, if we hadn't funded this crazy German who talked about relativity and bending the light, or this crazy guy who wanted to build a device based on that strange quantum theory thing and all he talked about was dead cats in a box — I mean, what was he talking about? But because they funded those things, we now have GPS.

Grunsfeld: All of news about the James Webb Space Telescope over the past year has been about how it's expensive, it's going to take a long time, and if only we didn't have to spend that money, we'd be able to do all these great scientific things. And what has been lost for some reason that I don't understand — maybe because I'm a newcomer to the project — is that, yes it's expensive, but it's also, enormously by many factors, the most capable astronomical facility that we'll ever have.

And in the fields of dark energy, dark matter, all of astrophysics, but specifically in exoplanets, it does all the things that everybody is saying, "Oh, if only we didn't have James Webb we could do this." But James Webb does it, and does it better than they think the new missions might. So it's very frustrating.

This story was provided by Astrobiology Magazine, a web-based publication sponsored by the NASA astrobiology program.

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Contributing Writer

Leslie Mullen is an award-winning science photojournalist who has produced TV, radio, podcasts, live stage shows, and web features. Her work has been featured by NASA, PBS, National Geographic Channel, and other media outlets. Recently, Leslie has worked as writer, producer and host of the NASA/JPL podcast, "On a Mission," which was part of JPL's 2019 Emmy Award for "Outstanding Original Interactive Program." The podcast was awarded the gold medal for best technology podcast at the 2019 New York Festivals Radio Awards, and was a 2019 Webby Award honoree for best science and education podcast.