Science

Launch of James Webb Space Telescope delayed after spaceport mishap

The European Space Agency says the launch of a new NASA telescope to replace the famed Hubble observatory is being postponed to allow experts to check the device for possible damage following an incident at its spaceport in French Guiana.

Telescope launch pushed back 4 days so it can be checked after clamp band loosened, jolting it

In this 2017 photo made available by NASA, technicians lift the mirror assembly of the James Webb Space Telescope using a crane inside a clean room at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. The telescope is now scheduled to launch on Dec. 22, four days later than planned, so it can be checked for damage following an incident at the European Space Agency's spaceport in French Guiana. (Desiree Stover/NASA/The Associated Press)

The European Space Agency says the launch of a new NASA telescope to replace the famed Hubble observatory is being postponed to allow experts to check the device for possible damage following an incident at its spaceport in French Guiana.

The ESA said in a statement late Monday that technicians had been preparing to attach the James Webb Space Telescope to a launch vehicle adapter when a clamp band suddenly loosened, jolting the delicate observatory.

"A NASA-led anomaly review board was immediately convened to investigate and instituted additional testing to determine with certainty (that) the incident did not damage any components," ESA said. "NASA and its mission partners will provide an update when the testing is completed at the end of this week."

ESA said the telescope will now launch aboard an Ariane 5 rocket no earlier than Dec. 22 — four days after the original planned liftoff date of Dec. 18.