WASHINGTON: US space agency NASA does not intend to rename its much-awaited James Webb Space Telescope, despite controversy over its name, according to media reports.
The $10 billion telescope, scheduled to launch on December 18, is a technological marvel. Webb will be the largest, most powerful and complex space telescope ever built and launched into space.
Touted as the successor to the iconic Hubble Space Telescope, it aims to fundamentally alter understanding of the universe.
However, the telescope has been mired in controversy after it was named after former NASA administrator James Webb, who went along with government discrimination against gay and lesbian employees in the 1950s and 1960s, NPR reported.
The Webb telescope was formerly known as the "Next Generation Space Telescope" (NGST), but was renamed in September 2002.
When NASA investigated the matter, it found no evidence and decided not to change the telescope's name.
"We have found no evidence at this time that warrants changing the name of the James Webb Space Telescope," NASA administrator Bill Nelson, was quoted as saying.
Earlier this year, over 1,200 people, mostly astronomers or astronomy enthusiasts, including scholars who want to use the new telescope for their own research, signed a petition urging NASA to rename the telescope.
They alleged that Webb seems to have been complicit in the purge of homosexual people from government jobs during his time in public service, including when he served in a high-level position in the US State Department, the report said.
They cited evidence such as the interrogation of NASA employee Clifford Norton, who was fired in 1963 while Webb was directing the agency.
"The historical record is already clear: under Webb's leadership, queer people were persecuted," the letter said. (IANS)
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