In the wide galleries where flight and exploration quietly converge, the past and the future often meet in stillness. Beneath high ceilings and suspended aircraft, objects once built for distant journeys rest in calm display cases, their long voyages distilled into shape and metal. The atmosphere is hushed, as though the machinery of discovery itself has paused to reflect.
At the Smithsonian Institution, new arrivals now occupy part of that quiet landscape of exploration. Artifacts connected to two modern space missions—one reaching toward the earliest light of the universe, the other venturing deep into the Sun’s atmosphere—have been placed on view for the public.
Inside the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, part of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, visitors can now see testing hardware from the James Webb Space Telescope alongside a full-scale model of the Parker Solar Probe. The display brings together two spacecraft that represent very different directions of exploration: one gazing outward toward the first galaxies, the other traveling inward toward the blazing surface of the Sun.
The Webb artifact on display is a testing structure known as the Optical Telescope Element Pathfinder backbone. This hardware helped engineers rehearse the complex assembly and alignment of the telescope’s mirrors and support systems long before the spacecraft itself launched into space.
Nearby stands a life-size representation of the Parker Solar Probe, the spacecraft launched in 2018 on a mission unlike any before it. Protected by an advanced heat shield, the probe travels closer to the Sun than any human-made object has ever ventured, flying through the Sun’s outer atmosphere—the corona—to measure particles, magnetic fields, and the origins of the solar wind.
Together, the two artifacts represent a broad arc of scientific ambition. The Webb telescope peers across more than 13 billion years of cosmic history, observing distant galaxies and faint infrared light from the early universe. Meanwhile, the Parker Solar Probe turns its instruments toward our nearest star, seeking to understand how solar energy and charged particles flow through the solar system and shape the space environment around Earth.
Within the museum’s expansive hangar, the objects now rest among aircraft, rockets, and satellites that mark earlier chapters of exploration. Suspended quietly in the gallery’s open air, they carry the traces of missions still unfolding—journeys continuing far beyond the building’s walls.
The exhibit allows visitors to stand near the engineering forms behind two of NASA’s most ambitious missions, offering a close look at the structures that helped scientists push outward toward the first galaxies and inward toward the Sun’s blazing atmosphere.
The artifacts are now on permanent display at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.
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