Share

Behind the Webb Video Podcast

Subscribe
December 8, 2009

Show 1: Uncovering MIRI's Detectors


HubbleSite works better when you install the latest Flash Player for your browser and enable JavaScript.
Embed

Download this episode:

Right-click and choose "Save Target As..."

Watch an episode:

Show 1: Uncovering MIRI's Detectors Uncovering MIRI's Detectors
December 8, 2009
Show 2: Jack of All Sunshields Jack of All Sunshields
December 31, 2009
Show 3: The Big Chill The Big Chill
February 23, 2010
Show Notes

The digital camera in your home shares a family tree with the James Webb Space Telescope. Webb's instruments use "detectors," similar to the sensors in digital cameras, to convert images into a digital signal.

The detectors being tested at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., are part of the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI). The detectors, which will be housed in insulated, brick-like structures called focal plane modules, go through intensive temperature and vibration testing to ensure they survive the ride into orbit. The detectors have to be perfectly aligned within these brick structures, so they don't move out of position when the chill of space causes materials to shrink. MIRI will be the most sensitive mid-infrared instrument ever flown in space, helping us see deeper into the universe than ever before.

Techonology Overview: Instruments

NASA's Webb instruments page

Images of Webb's detectors

NASA news feature: James Webb Space Telescope Testing to Find Infrared Light for Christmas

NASA news feature: Shake, Rattle and Roll: James Webb Telescope Components Pass Tests