Looking Through Time With NASA’s Lead Photographer for the James Webb Space Telescope #SpaceSaturday
We’ve all seen the astonishing images of the cosmos captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. Chris Gunn, the lead photographer for the Webb Telescope, has been there throughout the construction of the telescope, chronicling the creation of an history-making engineering feat. Here’s more from NASA:
CHRIS GUNN NASA/GSFC Lead Photographer for Webb Telescope: Traveling alongside Webb as it grew and evolved, and to be able to add my signature to each photograph captured, was of course an honor, but also an immense challenge. With each image, I wanted to express the awe that I felt seeing Webb integrated right before my eyes, knowing that it was destined to shed new light on the mysteries of the cosmos.
To capture Webb in its true beauty, I employed the use of specialized lighting rigs, often setting up lights early before the start of work. Johnson Space Center’s Chamber A was an especially tough subject to shoot once Webb was inside. It required remote lights that had to be adjusted perfectly before I boarded a boom lift to make the photograph from seven stories up. It was all worth it, everyone’s hard work – just look at how well our starship is performing.
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