Talks and shows

Solar system science from the James Webb Space Telescope

Join NASA scientist Naomi Rowe-Gurney as she explores the Webb telescope.

a honyecomb structure with poles and sheets reaching out from it
Artist conception of the James Webb Space Telescope, Image credit: NASA GSFC/CIL/Adriana Manrique Gutierrez via Flick

This event was originally scheduled for Tuesday 22 March 2022. If you have a ticket and can't make the new date, please contact us at events@ri.ac.uk

The James Webb Space Telescope, or JWST, launched on Christmas day, and has just completed the most complex space deployment in history. This huge infrared telescope will be used to look at objects in our own solar system.

Join NASA scientist Naomi Rowe-Gurney as she discusses her research into the ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, and the many other research areas that JWST can help with.

In this talk, Naomi explores just what the Webb is, and the big science questions it could help to answer. From planetary atmospheres to Kuiper belt objects and comets, Webb is equipped to observe them all.

Event type

This is a livestream event where the speaker and audience come together online. 

You will have priority access to the recorded video for two weeks after the event has taken place.

For more information on livestreams, see the information below, or visit our FAQs page. Please use the event link you have been provided with.  

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About Naomi Rowe-Gurney

Naomi Rowe-Guerney

Dr Naomi Rowe-Gurney is a JWST GTO postdoctoral research associate at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center employed by Howard University. She is a solar system ambassador for the JWST working with Dr Stefanie Milam and Dr Heidi Hammel.

She obtained her PhD in 2021 from the University of Leicester working with supervisor Dr Leigh Fletcher. Her thesis used archived data from the Spitzer Space Telescope to study the thermal structure and composition of the middle atmospheres of the ice giants, Uranus and Neptune. She used the retrieval algorithm NEMESIS and built a consistent retrieval framework for the ice giant planets ahead of the launch of the JWST. Throughout the PhD, Naomi used her teaching experience to partake in significant outreach and public engagement work.

Naomi also engaged in considerable equality, diversity and inclusion work and was an active member of university committees, as well as promoting science to underrepresented groups. The majority of the engagement work she focused on was for the JWST and promoting its use for looking at our own solar system, especially the giant planets.

Timing for the livestream

The livestream will go live at 6.55pm and the introduction will begin at 7.00pm. If you register but miss the livestream, the video will be available to you via the same link for two weeks after the event date.

Event terms and conditions

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