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slickhedstrong t1_j7l9j57 wrote

i hate these they're using an artist's rendering to represent a speck of light in these stories

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SgtPepe t1_j7mgyo2 wrote

I'd like to see the actual image

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-Badger2- t1_j7n40ex wrote

Imagine a screen of completely black pixels, and one of the pixels is imperceptibly brighter than the others.

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SgtPepe t1_j7n5yav wrote

How can the telescope see clearer things millions of light years away but something inside our own solar system is blurry pixels?

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Aethelric t1_j7n6i9w wrote

This is reductive, but think of a telescope like a zooming lens on a typical camera. When you zoom in on an object to get a clear shot, you need to set your focus to do so. Objects that are closer or farther than where you've set your focus will be progressively more blurry and harder to make out.

What's happened here is that JWST was interested in something at a completely different distance, but caught a blurry image of something much closer.

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JohnDavidsBooty t1_j7o2rho wrote

because a star is very large and gives off its own light while an asteroid is very small and reflects a mere fraction of the light that reaches it

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nybble41 t1_j7ocikg wrote

The actual paper includes an image of the sensor data.

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JoeFTPgamerIOS t1_j7psctn wrote

That’s really cool thanks for sharing the link. I remember when the JWST was cooling there was a lot of discussion on the first pictures and it was rarely mentioned that it doesn’t take pictures. Everything shared is a rendering.

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Tichrom t1_j7mtr73 wrote

It serves two purposes. It makes it more accessible. The average person would see the actual image from the telescope (a speck of light) and have no clue what they are looking at. This way, they get an idea of what is being talked about.

It's also sensationalism to try and drive funding up.

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