HomeScienceNASA completes next-generation Roman telescope, bringing scientists closer to answering if we’re alone

NASA completes next-generation Roman telescope, bringing scientists closer to answering if we’re alone

NASA has completed assembling the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope, a powerful infrared observatory set to scan vast cosmic regions, raising anticipation about what it may soon uncover about dark energy and distant worlds.

December 20, 2025 / 10:02 IST
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An artist’s visual depiction of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. (Image: NASA)
An artist’s visual depiction of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. (Image: NASA)

NASA has completed assembling the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope, marking a major step toward its planned launch later this decade.

The space agency joined the telescope’s two primary sections inside a controlled clean room at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Officials said the milestone keeps the mission progressing toward launch readiness. The observatory could be prepared for flight by fall 2026. A formal launch is currently scheduled for May 2027.

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What the Roman telescope will study
The Roman Telescope is an infrared observatory designed for wide surveys. It carries two scientific instruments aboard the spacecraft. The Wide Field Instrument offers an exceptionally broad viewing area. Its field is around 100 times larger than Hubble’s. This allows rapid mapping of vast regions of space.

Roman is built to investigate dark energy and cosmic expansion. Scientists will also conduct a large census of exoplanets. The mission includes searching for primordial black holes. It will study stars, galaxies, and evolving planetary systems.