James Webb Telescope: Planets located 65 light years away from ₹ 75,000 crore telescope, will reveal the secret of the solar system

James Webb Telescope: Planets located 65 light years away from ₹ 75,000 crore telescope, will reveal the secret of the solar system

It is also expected to navigate the Milky Way, as it may contain comets, asteroids, rocks of various sizes, and dust around the star.

After the Hubble Space Telescope was discovered in space, the American space company NASA is now preparing to launch a successor. The long-awaited James Webb Space Telescope could be launched in October this year. A plan to study the planet's 63-year-old solar system has been developed with the help of this telescope, which was built at a cost of $ 10 billion, or about 75 billion rupees.

There are at least two planets in this Beta Pictoris system. Apart from this, there are many other rocky objects and there is also a disc. Through this study, an effort will be made to understand the dust. Its path is also expected to be straight to the Milky Way as it may contain comets, asteroids, rocks of various sizes and dust around the star.

According to Chris Stark of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, researchers are determined to understand the planet's orbit. Stark and his team will learn about James Webb's coronagraph, which can block out starlight and read a disc made of debris. There are job opportunities because of the pieces that come out of it.

Stark has told us that there are at least some large planets in Beta Pictoris and these are small rocky objects far away but in the middle of them and how does it compare to our solar system? I hope you find the answers to questions like this one from James Webb.

Beta Pictoris has twice the mass of the Sun but has a shorter lifespan. When our Sun is 4.6 billion years old, Beta Pictoris is only 20 million years old. James Webb is more sensitive than any other telescope ever built and with its help we can look for evidence and detect smoke in the presence of gas.