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Christian Scientist Helped Reveal Beauty Of Universe Through James Webb Telescope

NASA’s new James Webb Space Telescope captures the edge of a nearby, young star-forming region in the Carina Nebula called NGC 3324, disclosing for the first time previously unseeable areas of star birth. The tallest “peaks” in the photo are about 7 light-years high. ACU graduate Scott Acton helped develop the telescope. Photo via nasa.gov.

Gleaming stars. Swirling galaxies. Streaking lights.

The first images from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope released July 12 revealed segments of God’s beautiful universe never seen before. The whole world is now seeing clearer pictures of the Carina Nebula, Stephan’s Quintet, Southern Ring Nebula, and galaxy cluster SMACS 0723.

And Scott Acton, a 1984 graduate of Abilene Christian University, which is associated with Churches of Christ, helped develop the tool to make it all possible. After completing his physics degree at the West Texas university, Acton earned a doctorate at Texas Tech University in Lubbock before beginning his career in the aerospace industry.

Acton, 60, a scientist at Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colorado, served as the wavefront sensing and controls scientist on the James Webb Space Telescope project for what turned out to be an almost 24-year endeavor.

Acton’s journey to participate in the project began years earlier in Hawaii when he was working for Keck Observatory on the Big Island, where his family lived for six years. On the side, he was working as a contractor for aerospace companies Lockheed Martin and Raytheon Technologies, who were among other companies submitting proposals to build a telescope for NASA.

Stephan’s Quintet, a visual grouping of five galaxies best known for being prominently featured in the holiday classic film, “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Photo via nasa.gov.

Acton said he believed Aerospace would win the competition for the contract, and because he wanted to participate in the telescope’s construction, the scientist applied to work for the company and moved to Boulder in 2001. He joined a team assigned to work on the telescope’s optics.

Northrop Grumman Corp., an American multinational aerospace and defense technology company, served as the primary contractor for NASA’s mission, leading the industry team.

The telescope was launched on Dec. 25, 2021, from Kourou, French Guiana, and it is designed to have a mission lifetime that could reach two decades.

Regardless of a person’s beliefs, Acton believes the images from the James Webb telescope will be a spiritual experience:

“Seeing these images will increase your faith. It will increase your faith in whatever you have faith in, but it will absolutely increase it.”

Two cameras aboard Webb captured the latest image of this planetary nebula, cataloged as NGC 3132, and known informally as the Southern Ring Nebula. It is approximately 2,500 light-years away. Photos via nasa.gov.

Acton said everyone has their own emotional moment when working on groundbreaking projects. He clearly remembers his own.

This past February, his team received a throwaway image from one of the telescope’s fine guidance sensors and placed it on some infrared detectors, downloading the photo after about a 40-second exposure. What he saw brought him to tears.

“When you stretch the contrast in that image, I realized that single image contained probably 500 galaxies that had never been seen before,” Acton said.

Any one of those galaxies could contain 100-200 billion stars, he explained, and those stars could have planets in a habitable zone, and those planets could harbor life.

The galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, as capture by the James Webb Space Telescope. Photo via nasa.gov.

Acton walked back to his apartment around midnight talking to his wife about what he had witnessed.

At the time he remembered a Scripture about stars singing (Job 38:7), and when he imagined all those galaxies, “I pictured them singing,” the scientist recalled.

“Not in any kind of a language that people could understand, but certainly the emotion we can understand. I would call that emotion, joy,” Acton said. “It’s almost like the galaxies or the universe was happy that after all this time we could finally see them.”

This story is republished from The Christian Chronicle. Gabriel Grant Huff, a multimedia journalism major at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas, is The Christian Chronicle’s summer 2022 intern.