In many ways, the NASA James Webb Space Telescope is being looked at as the next big step in space exploration. Perhaps, the biggest step of them all. After taking the torch from the old reliable Hubble Space Telescope, JWST promises observation into deep space that wasn't even imaginable before. And it does that using two critical instruments called NIRcam and MIRI. NIRcam stands for Near Infrared Camera and it takes images in a spectrum that escapes the visual range of a human. MIRI stands for Mid-Infrared Instrument and it takes images in a spectrum that is deeper into infrared light to view objects like black holes that are not even physically possible to be viewed using any of the Earth-based instruments. And scientists believe that using these instruments, Webb Telescope will not only reveal unseen footage from far away galaxies but also prove classical quantum physics theories like the Big Bang and Red shift.
There are two popular theories when it comes to the origin of the universe. First is the Big Bang theory, which states that around 13.8 billion years ago, a humongous explosion took place in the dense structure of gasses and dust and that's how the first star formed and it started a chain reaction through which all the present stars, planets and galaxies were formed and that in itself created life somehow. The second theory suggests that ever since the Big Bang, the universe is expanding, or in simpler terms, it is moving away from each other. All the planets and stars and galaxies are moving away from each other in what has been dubbed as the Red Shift. And yes, there is a theory about the Blue Shift too in the scientific community.
According to scientists, the further a galaxy is, the more red-shifted its
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