How to Tell the Difference Between Hubble and Webb Images

The difference between Hubble and Webb images is more than simple clarity or resolution. Here is a simple way to tell the difference between images taken by the older. The most glaring difference—pun intended—are the eight-pointed diffraction spikes jutting out from some stars in the image.
Telling the Difference Between Hubble &Webb ImagesEight-Pointed Diffraction SpikesDiffraction spikes—the flares pointing out from some of the brightest stars—are interference patterns that come from light scattered off mirror struts that support the secondary mirror on the telescope. The edges of all the eighteen hexagonal mirrors on the Webb create additional diffraction patterns. Since these flares result from interference patterns, the intensity of the spikes depends on the brightness and wavelength of the object observed.





The image below does not show a new type of star or an alien spacecraft. The snowflake-like arrangement in the star appears to mimic the mirror’s structure in various colors. Different wavelengths show as separate variations of the interference patterns.

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