After years of delay, NASA launched the James Webb Space Telescope on December 25, 2021, aiming to capture the first lights of the universe. The space telescope, weeks after its launch, has now reached the position where it will observe throughout its life and has started to make its first observations. The first color images taken by the telescope were shared the other day.
While the first color images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope managed to enchant us all, of course, both he and his images became the new ‘meme’ material of the internet. Along with the photo shared by NASA, funny posts were made about the James Webb telescope and the images. Let’s take a look at the posts for James Webb, who has been on the internet agenda lately.
The James Webb Space Telescope and its images became meme material of the internet:
10 years late joke:
“I waited at least 10 years to make this meme.”
Space is actually a place where we sit every day:
“I was amazed by the gravitational lensing! I never expected to see this much clarity and color.”
It looks like it’s from elsewhere too:
“I was sure I saw a picture of James Webb somewhere.”
We might even be stepping on:
“It’s finally here! The deepest and clearest infrared view of the universe to date.”
You can even make your own space:
It looked familiar from somewhere.
We suddenly forget about Hubble:
In 2001: Star Trek Adventure, the scene that we cannot understand and that Teletubbies encounter every day was seen:
“Stunning new photo from the James Webb Space Telescope.”
The new photos will of course be used for commercial profit, not just memes:
“Puzzle makers after seeing the photo of the James Webb Telescope”
The only technology that can’t evolve is:
“A security camera 4.6 billion light years away / 3 meters away”
Coming soon Xiaomi:
“You’re a telescope, Harry”
What James Webb means to many of us:
“$10 billion telescope / $10 billion background machine for science”
Of course they exaggerated a bit:
“You vs. the telescope he said you shouldn’t worry about”
After all, Hubble should not be dishonored:
“The more I see how good James Web is, the more I appreciate how great Hubble was for its time.”