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Introduction
Our Mission
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We Are Multi-Mission
We help humanity explore the universe with advanced space telescopes and ever-growing data archives.
Collage of artist illustrations of STScI missions Collage of artist illustrations of STScI missions -
We Further Scientific Research
We envision, define, and operate missions that offer cutting-edge research opportunities for the astronomical community.
Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) -
We Inspire Through Outreach
We share scientific knowledge of the universe in ways that inspire, excite, challenge, and educate.
A group of students looking at the sky through eclipse glasses. A group of students looking at the sky through eclipse glasses.
Recent News
Institute Announcements
Current
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Even More Robust: Hubble Spectroscopic Legacy Archive (HSLA)
HSLA now automatically defines targets, groups like observations, and produces detailed classifications to support research.Illustration shows large text, HSLA, above smaller text, Hubble Spectroscopic Legacy Archive. Jagged rainbow-colored lines appear behind HSLA. The background is gray with various astronomical targets in black. Illustration shows large text, HSLA, above smaller text, Hubble Spectroscopic Legacy Archive. Jagged rainbow-colored lines appear behind HSLA. The background is gray with various astronomical targets in black.
Press Releases
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NASA's Roman Could Bring New Waves of Information on Galaxy’s Stars
November 20, 2025Mosaic titled "Red Giant Echoes with Roman," which shows 11 artist’s concepts of stars, including the Sun and 10 red giants of various radii against a black background. The illustrations are organized roughly into three rows with the grid size of the largest red giant star, located in the bottom right, the equivalent of two rows. Each star is depicted as a bright and blotchy orb. Starting with the mosaic’s smallest star, the Sun, in the top left corner and shifting to the right before moving to the next row, the illustrations become gradually larger and change from shades of light orange to red-orange. Each star’s radius is placed at the bottom of its grid. From left to right, the four light orange stars in the top row are listed with the following radii: Sun, Radius 1.0; Radius 6.3; Radius 7.0, and Radius 7.8. The second row has three orange stars and reads: Radius 8.8; Radius 9.7; and Radius 10.7. The third has four red-orange stars and reads: Radius 11.8; Radius 15.0; Radius 20.1; and Radius 33.7. -
Webb First to Show 4 Dust Shells 'Spiraling' Apep, Limits Long Orbit
November 19, 2025Four dust shells expand away from three central stars that appear as a single pinpoint of light in a thin horizontal. Only three shells are prominent, with the fourth faded at the edges. The innermost shell is smallest, like the size of a thumbprint, and brightest. It is yellow and forms a backward lowercase e. A line at 3 o’clock swoops to the bottom-left in an arc that ends at 8 o’clock. A second line at 9 o’clock dips down to start, but then goes straight up, angling around the top. The second shell, about the size of a fist, is orange and has looser arcs. One appears from 4 to 7 o’clock. A brighter orange triangle appears from 10 to 12 o’clock. Its outer edges overlap, forming a rough circle. The third shell extends almost to the edges and is semi-translucent red, with similar arcs and a darker red line that also forms a faint triangle at top left. The widest shell is barely discernable at the edges. A semi-transparent blue appears across the scene. -
Researchers Submit Record Number of Ambitious Proposals for Webb's Fifth Year of Science
November 12, 2025Illustration of the James Webb Space Telescope at the right with its gold, hexagon-shaped primary mirror and multi-layer sunshield. At left is a representation of part of its 18 primary mirror segments, which takes up about two-thirds of the view. Each segment is outlined in yellow and contains a different Webb image, artist’s concept, or spectrum (graph). The images display dying stars puffing off layers of gas and dust, spiral galaxies, planets, and deep fields of space spattered with fuzzy white galaxies. Three yellow, orange, and red wavy lines appear atop everything else, running left to right. The backdrop shows filaments of red gas and dust, white and blue stars, and distant galaxies, all against the black background of space.
Events
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Fundamental Properties and Atmospheric Chemistry of Cool Brown Dwarfs with JWST
10 Dec 2025While great progress has been made over the last 20 years in determining the fundamental properties of brown dwarfs, the coolest brown dwarfs with Teff < 500 K have proven difficult...
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Webb Office Hours
Promotional image for Webb Office Hours Promotional image for Webb Office Hours11 Dec 2025The JWST User Community is invited to call into Webb Office Hours to ask questions and directly interact with a team of STScI JWST experts via WebEx. We welcome questions about the...
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Planets, Asteroids, and Interstellar Interlopers, OH MY! Revealing the Solar System with JWST
17 Dec 2025Speaker: Dr. Stefanie Milam (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) The James Webb Space Telescope may have been designed to detect the first stars and galaxies of our Universe,...
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JWST at the 247th American Astronomical Society Meeting
4-8 Jan 2026The 247th American Astronomical Society (AAS) meeting will include sessions focused on groundbreaking science with JWST, as well as a report from STScI as we get ready to wrap...
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Roman at the 247th American Astronomical Society Meeting
4-8 Jan 2026The 247th American Astronomical Society (AAS) meeting will feature a variety of events focused on science with Roman, such as town halls, splinter sessions, and iposter presentations....
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CoolSci: Celebrating STScI Achievement in Astronomical Research Award Winners
14 Jan 2026Featuring 2025 STScI Achievement in Astronomical Research Award Winners Marco Chiaberge (STScI), Stephanie La Massa (STScI), and Marc Rafelski (STScI).
About the Institute
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Our History
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) during rendezvous with STS-125 Shuttle Atlantis Hubble Space Telescope (HST) during rendezvous with STS-125 Shuttle AtlantisLearn More -
Our Locations
View of Baltimore skyline at sunset near the Inner Harbor View of Baltimore skyline at sunset near the Inner HarborLearn More -
Career Opportunities
Several employees working at the JWST Mission Operating Center Several employees working at the JWST Mission Operating CenterLearn More