for signs of life on other planets. alice key reports. mission control: we have reached the end of deployment and we are preloading into the launch pad. cheering and applause. celebrations from mission control in baltimore as the final piece of the telescope puzzle slots into place. there are no cameras on board so this live animation was the only way to see the final mirrored wing of the world s largest space telescope unfold. mission control: and we have a fully deployed jws webb observatory. all right. talking to staff afterwards, nasa s director of science praised them for making history. i want to tell you just how excited and emotional i am right now. we have a deployed telescope in orbit. a magnificent telescope the likes of which the world has never seen. so how does it feel to make history, everybody? you just did it! the new observatory will look deeper into space than ever before. infrared technology will allow it to see the first stars and galaxies formed a 13.5 billion yea
we have a deployed telescope in orbit. a magnificent telescope, the likes of which the world has never seen. so how does it feel to make history, everybody? you just did it! the new observatory will look deeper into space than ever before. infrared technology will allow it to see the first stars and galaxies formed a 13.5 billion years ago. it s also going to be able to look into the really dusty environments around where stars grow up and where new planets are forming. that s one of the places that will help slightly closer to home as well as at the beginning of the universe. and lift off! 20 years in the making, it was successfully launched on christmas day, but it was so big it had to be flat packed inside a rocket to make it into orbit. over the past two weeks it s been slowly unfurling as it travels nearly one million miles away from earth to circle the sun. but for it to send back images, each segment now has to line up
the time, in terms of corruption within the ukrainian government. they are still a sovereign nation, and he made the decision, made the call they needed for national defense. it is not going to enough, in your view, to stop us onslaught and invasion? probably not to stop the onslaught, but it will make them pay a terrible price, the russians. it s the finest antitank missile in the world. it s a man portable, it s about 40 pounds. it got a range of almost 3 miles. it s day or night, uses infrared technology. it s fire and forget. the shooter can shoot the missile and moved to another location before they can be identified. more importantly, it s called a top attack missile. you shoot it, it moves up to above a vehicle and attacked the top of the vehicle. the reason why that s so important, that s the least armored place on a vehicle. there is no armor that can
country russian casualties are growing, as a new report is saying that russian forces have mobile crematorium s that will evaporate soldiers killed in attacks to minimize the appearance of russian deaths. ukrainians are standing strong, in part bolstered by the javelin missiles supplied by the trump administration. they are antitank missiles designed to destroy the tanks, armored vehicles, and helicopters. they use infrared technology. they are a game changer for ukraine, and have a range of up to 2.5 miles. these weapons were first supplied to ukraine by president donald trump. here with more reaction, fox news contributor retired lieutenant general keith kellogg, along with the hudson institute senior researcher rebecca heinrichs. general, these javelins are a game changer. i am glad that donald trump did provide them. there were a lot of questions at