Apr 4, 2026
When a problem with the James Webb Space Telescope left its images frustratingly out of focus, the solution wasn't fixed in space... it was fixed from Earth. At the University of Sydney, PhD students Dr. Louis Desdoigts and Max Charles spent two years rewriting and refining code to recalibrate a critical instrument designed by Professor Peter Tuthill: the Aperture Masking Interferometer.
Their breakthrough sharpened the telescope’s infrared
vision unlocking clearer views of distant worlds, including
volcanic activity on Io, one of Jupiter’s moons. In a fitting
tribute, the pair even got matching tattoos of the hardware they
helped fix!
Not only did their work restore clarity to one of humanity’s most
powerful observatories, it also saved NASA the immense cost and
impossibility of repairing the telescope in space.