When you ask an astronomer about the James Webb Space Telescope's
orbit, they'll tell you something that sounds like it came from a
science-fiction novel. The Webb won't be orbiting the Earth –instead we
will send it almost a million miles out into space to a place called
"L2."
L2 is short-hand for the second Lagrange Point, a wonderful accident of
gravity and orbital mechanics, and the perfect place to park the Webb
telescope in space. There are five so-called "Lagrange Points" - areas
where gravity from the sun and Earth balance the orbital motion of a
satellite. Putting a spacecraft at any of these points allows it to
stay in a fixed position relative to the Earth and sun with a minimal
amount of energy needed for course correction.
The term L2 may sound futuristic and mysterious, but the name actually
honors a Mathematician born in 1736. The Lagrange points were named
after the Italian-born mathematician and astronomer Joseph-Louis
Lagrange, who made important contributions to classical and celestial
mechanics. Lagrange studied the "three-body problem" (so-called because
three bodies are orbiting each other) for the Earth, sun, and moon in
1764, and by 1772 he had found the solution; there are five stable
points at which you could put an object and have it stay fixed in place
relative to the other two.
In the case of L2, this happens about 930,000 miles away from the Earth
in the exact opposite direction from the sun. The Earth, as we know,
orbits the sun once every year. Normally, an object almost a million
miles farther out from the sun should move more slowly, taking more
than a year to complete its orbit around the sun. However, at L2,
exactly lined up with both the sun and Earth, the added gravity of the
two large bodies pulling in the same direction gives a spacecraft an
extra boost of energy, locking it into perfect unison with the Earth's
yearly orbit. The Webb telescope will be placed slightly off the true
balance point, in a gentle orbit around L2.
The James Webb Space Telescope relative to the Hubble telescope's orbit around the Earth. Credit: NASA
Why send the Webb telescope all the way out to L2? When astronomers
began to think about where the Webb telescope should be placed in
space, there were several considerations to keep in mind. To begin
with, the Webb telescope will view the universe entirely in infrared
light, what we commonly think of as heat radiation. To give the
telescope the best chance of detecting distant, dim objects in space,
the coldest temperatures possible are needed.
"A huge advantage of deep space (like L2) when compared to Earth orbit
is that we can radiate the heat away," said Jonathan P. Gardner, the
Deputy Senior Project Scientist on the Webb Telescope mission and Chief
of the Observational Cosmology Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "Webb works in the infrared, which is
heat radiation. To see the infrared light from distant stars and
galaxies, the telescope has to be cold. Webb's large sunshield will
protect it from both Sunlight and Earthlight, allowing it to cool to
225 degrees below zero Celsius (minus 370 Fahrenheit)." For the
sunshield to be effective, Webb will need to be an orbit where the sun
and Earth are in about the same direction.
With the sun and the Earth in the same part of the sky, the Webb
telescope will enjoy an open, unimpeded view of the universe. In
comparison, the Hubble Space Telescope is in low-Earth orbit where it
goes in and out of the Earth's shadow every 90 minutes. Hubble's view
is blocked by the Earth for part of each orbit, limiting where the
telescope can look at any given time.
The Spitzer Space Telescope, another infrared telescope, is in orbit
around the sun and drifting away from the Earth. Spitzer is already
more than 100 million kilometers (60 million miles) away from the
Earth, and eventually its path will take it to the other side of the
sun. Once we can no longer communicate with Spitzer that means it is at
the end of its mission life.
In contrast, a major perk of parking at L2 is the ease of
communications. Essentially, the Webb telescope will always be at the
same point in space. "We can have continuous communications with Webb
through the Deep Space Network (DSN)," Gardner said. "During routine
operations, we will uplink command sequences and downlink data up to
twice per day, through the DSN. The observatory can perform a sequence
of commands (pointing and observations) autonomously. Typically, we
will upload a full week's worth of commands at a time, and make updates
daily as needed."
Even before the Webb telescope, L2 has been known to astronomers as a
good spot for space-based observatories. There are already several
satellites in the L2 orbit, including the Wilkinson Microwave
Anisotropy Probe, and the Herschel and Planck space observatories. But
there's plenty of room for another neighbor, and the Webb telescope
will be heading out to L2 in the near future.
The Webb telescope is a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agenc