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The telescope and scientific instruments for NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope have been successfully integrated at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. The integration marks a significant step in the mission’s development, as the payload will soon be connected to the spacecraft. According to NASA officials, this milestone ensures the observatory is on track for its anticipated completion by late 2026 and a scheduled launch no later than May 2027.

Major Payload Components Assembled

Reports indicate that the payload includes three primary components: the Wide Field Instrument, the Optical Telescope Assembly, and the Coronagraph Instrument. The Wide Field Instrument, described as a 300-megapixel infrared camera, will enable researchers to capture high-resolution, panoramic images of the universe at unprecedented speeds. The Optical Telescope Assembly features a 2.4-metre primary mirror and an advanced system of nine additional mirrors, all engineered for exceptional stability.

The Coronagraph Instrument, a technology demonstration, has been designed to study exoplanets by suppressing starlight and enabling the observation of planets orbiting other stars. The integration of these instruments aims to provide precise measurements of phenomena such as dark energy, dark matter, and cosmic structures across time and space.

Mission Advances Amid Assembly Milestones

As per statements attributed to Jody Dawson, systems engineer at NASA Goddard, the team remains focused on joining the integrated payload to the spacecraft before the year ends. Simultaneously, work is progressing on other mission elements, including the installation of solar panels and the deployable aperture cover, which will shield the telescope from unwanted light during operations.

Julie McEnery, senior project scientist, shared with media outlets that the telescope’s capabilities will significantly advance astronomical research, enabling rapid and expansive sky surveys unmatched by previous missions. Assembly and testing are expected to continue through the upcoming year to meet the targeted timeline.

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ESA’s Euclid Telescope Charts Over a Million Galaxies in Landmark First Data

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ESA’s Euclid space telescope has captured about 1.2 million galaxies in its first year, providing one of the most detailed wide-field surveys of the universe ever made. Covering distances up to 10 billion light-years, Euclid’s clear, expansive imaging is helping astronomers study galaxy shapes, mergers, dwarf galaxy populations, and the role of supermassive black …

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James Webb Space Telescope May Have Spotted the Universe’s First Stars, Astronomers Say

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Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have detected a distant, metal-poor galaxy whose unusually massive, ultraviolet-bright stars match the expected signatures of Population III — the universe’s first stars. Through the help of gravitational lensing and Webb’s infrared sensitivity, researchers observed light from just 800 million years after the Big …

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Mars Orbiter Tracks Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS With Unprecedented Precision

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Scientists mapped the path of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS with ten times greater accuracy using images from ESA’s Mars orbiter. The breakthrough shows how observations from different points in space can improve future planetary defense. The data, the first of its kind from another planet’s orbit, offers a powerful new tool for tracking fast-moving cosmic objects.

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