The James Webb Space Telescope Feed
The most extensive source of information about James Webb Space Telescope. JWST Feed contains every single piece of data from the telescope, and is updating live every few minutes. Our goal is to make the full JWST data accessible for the public.
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Giant Planet Systems | This false-color composite image of Jupiter was obtained July 27 with the NIRCam instrument on board the JWST. Jupiter’s faint rings — a million times dimmer than the planet — and two of its small satellites, Amalthea (left) and Adrastea (dot at edge of ring), are clearly visible against a background of distant galaxies. The diffraction pattern created by the bright auroras and the moon Io (to the left out of the image), form a complex background of scattered light around Jupiter. (Image credit: NASA, European Space Agency, Jupiter Early Release Science team. Image processing: Ricardo Hueso [UPV/EHU] and Judy Schmidt).
Giant Planet Systems | This July 27 image of Jupiter taken by the Near-Infrared Camera on the new James Webb Space Telescope is artificially colored to emphasize stunning details of the planet: auroral emission from ionized hydrogen at both the north and south poles (red); high-altitude hazes (green) that swirl around the poles; and light reflected from the deeper main cloud (blue). The Great Red Spot, the equatorial region and compact cloud regions appear white or reddish-white; regions with little cloud cover appear as dark ribbons north of the equatorial region. (Image credit: NASA, European Space Agency, Jupiter Early Release Science team. Image processing: Judy Schmidt)
Rogue planets and brown dwarfs: Predicting the populations of free-floating planetary mass objects observable with JWST
Cosmic Spring | JWST image of galaxy cluster WHL0137-08 lensing Earendel and the Sunrise Arc. Observed in 8 NIRCam filters. Color image by Trilogy. cosmic-spring.github.io
A Lower Bound of Star Formation Activity in Ultra-high Redshift Galaxies Detected with JWST: Implications for Stellar Populations and Radiation Sources
Early results from GLASS-JWST XIV: A first morphological atlas of the 1 < z < 5 Universe in the rest-frame optical
Unveiling the main sequence of galaxies at $z \geq 5$ with the James Webb Space Telescope: predictions from simulations
JWST sneaks a peek at the stellar morphology of $z\sim2$ submillimeter galaxies: Bulge formation at cosmic noon
Detection of Intracluster Globular Clusters in the First JWST Images of the Gravitational Lens Cluster SMACS J0723.3-7327 at z = 0.39
A lensed protocluster candidate at $z=7.66$ identified in JWST observations of the galaxy cluster SMACS0723-7327
The ultraviolet continuum slopes ($\mathbfβ$) of galaxies at $\mathbf{z\simeq8-16}$ from JWST and ground-based near-infrared imaging
Early Results From GLASS-JWST. XVII: Building the First Galaxies --
Chapter 1. Star Formation Histories at 5
Early results from GLASS-JWST XV: the faintest red sources in the NIRCAM deep fields are intrinsically blue
Early results from GLASS-JWST XV: the faintest red sources in the NIRCAM deep fields are intrinsically blue
JWST NIRCam+NIRSpec: Interstellar medium and stellar populations of young galaxies with rising star formation and evolving gas reservoirs
A Comprehensive Study on Galaxies at z~9-16 Found in the Early JWST Data: UV Luminosity Functions and Cosmic Star-Formation History at the Pre-Reionization Epoch
Searching for Extremely Blue UV Continuum Slopes at $z=7-11$ in JWST/NIRCam Imaging: Implications for Stellar Metallicity and Ionizing Photon Escape in Early Galaxies
On the ages of bright galaxies $\sim 500$ Myr after the Big Bang: insights into star formation activity at $z \gtrsim 15$ with JWST
Early results from GLASS-JWST. VII: evidence for lensed, gravitationally bound proto-globular clusters at z=4 in the Hubble Frontier Field A2744
Expectations of the size evolution of massive galaxies at $3 \leq z \leq 6$ from the TNG50 simulation: the CEERS/JWST view