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25 Years of Contamination Control on the James Webb Space Telescope

James Webb20221 min read212 words
Eve Wooldridge
Goddard Space Flight Center

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has actively been in process since 1996, and at last, on Christmas Day 2021, it launched. This launch was the fulfillment of an astounding level of work performed by thousands of people across the globe in dozens of disciplines. From the start, effective contamination control was considered essential for the JWST mission due to the large, exposed optics and tight sensitivity required to measure first light and faint signals at the dawn of the universe. This paper will present the JWST mission and requirements overview, including mission requirements that led to optimizing performance for collecting light in the Near Infrared (NIR, 0.6μm) – Mid Infrared (MIR, 29μm) range. Molecular films absorb in the IR bands and can alter thermal emissivity, resulting in increased noise at the longer wavelengths (MIRI). Particles increase light scatter and background noise levels at the shorter wavelengths (NIRSpec, NIRCam and FGS). The passively cooled design of JWST led to an open architecture for the optical telescope element (OTE), presenting the challenge of maintaining cleanliness throughout assembly, integration, and test in a multitude of environments. The paper will describe the mission and will introduce the specific areas of contamination control developed and advanced to keep JWST clean at an unsurpassed level of cleanliness.


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