About Reflections of JWST: Exploring the Cosmos by Maynard Hurley
One of humankind’s most significant technical achievements was the moon landing from the sixties. But what has NASA been up to lately, you might ask. Well, for the past twenty years, NASA has been quietly building the James Webb Space Telescope. The technical challenges are unrivaled, even by the incredible moon landing, some fifty years ago.
When the “Origami Telescope” unfolds in October 2021, taking on the dimensions of a tennis court, it will be 100 times more powerful than the legendary Hubble Space Telescope. Moreover, it’s a “time machine,” so sophisticated that we can look at the delicate signatures of the past, some 14 billion years ago! This fantastic tool is a product of the skillful hands and ingenious minds of over 2000 talented engineers, scientists, and technicians. Humankind will soon see the universe as never before.
This is a Very short, but thought-provoking look at how our understanding of the Cosmos is about to change and how our place in it will be re-envisioned. There are eight open-form poems with vivid imagery.
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Author Bio:
Ever since childhood, I was in preparation as a toolmaker to the Cosmos. I was a telescope mirror maker, to be specific. Dad had always made telescopes even before I arrived in 1957. He was the master optician at Kitt Peak, making the world’s biggest telescope mirrors that collected light for monstrous mountaintop observatories. I grew up with telescopes in my blood. We joined forces after college.
We worked together as father and son partners, making big mirrors in the desert. I learned from the master where he taught me the refined secrets as only he could. After a decade, we separated unwillingly with his early passing, and I was alone to carry on the family tradition. I took this expertise and added a graduate degree to augment myself before joining Kodak for even more, and this time “top secret,” telescope making. By now, I ascended to the next level in both technology and passion. In 2004, after a good seven-year run, opportunity raised its surprising head and enticed me away from the “dark side” with the promise of the James Webb Space Telescope. We called it Webb, the World’s most fantastic telescope project.
The Chief Engineer position at Thompson was the lure that caught this fish. Soon I was transported west to California for more telescope making fun. We were to polish Webb’s mirrors and eventually deliver them to the origami space telescope, which unfolds as it traverses to a solar orbit some million miles from its creators.
When the “Origami Telescope” unfolds in December 2021, taking on the dimensions of a tennis court, it will be 100 times more powerful than the legendary Hubble Space Telescope. Moreover, it’s a “time machine,” so sophisticated that we can look at the delicate signatures of the past, some 14 billion years ago! This fantastic tool is a product of the skillful hands and ingenious minds of over 2000 talented engineers, scientists, and technicians. Humankind will soon see the universe as never before.
As I age and reminisce, I feel obligated to share my story; our story, the Webb mirror makers, the “Webbsters.” I reflect and realize that I too am “out of warranty,” if you will. Here is my story and Welcome to my world.
Maynard