The James Webb Space Telescope will be the successor to NASA's 26-year-old Hubble Space Telescope.
The Webb telescope's infrared cameras are so sensitive that it needs to be shielded from the rays of the Sun.
A 5-layer sunshield of the sizer of a tennis court will prevent the background heat from the Sun from interfering with the telescope's infrared sensors.
The five sunshield membrane layers are each as thin as a human hair.
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Webb has been designed and constructed to withstand its launch environment, but it must be tested to verify that it will indeed survive and not change in any unexpected way.
The US space agency also made the first important optical measurement of James Webb Space Telescope fully assembled primary mirror, called a Center of Curvature test.
Making the same optical measurements both before and after simulated launch environment testing and comparing the results is fundamental to Webb's development, assuring that it will work in space.
"This test will show if there are any changes or damages to the optical system," Keski-Kuha said.
The most powerful space telescope ever built, the Webb telescope will provide images of the first galaxies ever formed, and explore planets around distant stars.
It is a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.