Monday, February 9th, 2026

James Webb Telescope: Where is it going?



The James Webb Telescope, travelling at 1.39 kilometers per second in the vacuum of space, is currently headed to a destination that humans will not see it again, which means that it will go as far as 15,00,000 kilometers away from Earth.

Just two days after it soared into skies following its launch, the telescope has covered more than 23 per cent of its journey to the location known called the second Lagrange point.

It is on a 30-day long journey and its intended orbit and is expected to reach the location by the end of January 2022.

The telescope includes its high-data-rate dish antenna, which will be used to send at least 28.6 gigabytes of science data down from the observatory, and that, too, twice a day.

According to NASA, engineers released and tested the motion of the antenna assembly, and the entire process took nearly one hour.

It will begin six months of commissioning in space and at the end of commissioning it will start delivering its first images.

Where is it headed to?

This telescope will not orbit the Earth. It is headed to a location called the second Lagrange point from where it will observe the universe.

NASA said that the Lagrange points are the positions in space where objects sent tend to stay put.

At the Lagrange points, the gravitational pull of two large masses precisely equals the centripetal force required for a small object to move with them, according to NASA.

Publish Date : 27 December 2021 14:54 PM

Two killed in motorcycle accident in Ghorahi

KATHMANDU: Two people were killed after a motorcycle met with

As alliance hopes dim, Oli banks on direct voter outreach in Jhapa-5

KATHMANDU: CPN-UML Chair KP Sharma Oli is currently in Jhapa,

Gagan Thapa calls for new economic model for infrastructure development

KATHMANDU: Nepali Congress leader Gagan Thapa has said that Nepal

Orange production worth Rs 316 million in Myagdi

MYAGDI: Oranges worth Rs 316 million were produced in Myagdi

Illegal goods seized from Korala checkpoint

MUSTANG: Security personnel have seized illegal goods from the Korala