NIRcam

NIRCam is an instrument aboard the James Webb Space Telescope. It has two major tasks, as an imager from 0.6 to 5 micron wavelength, and as a wavefront sensor to keep the 18-section mirrors functioning as one. In other words, it is a camera and is also used to provide information to align the 18 segments of the primary mirror. It is an infrared camera with ten mercury-cadmium-telluride detector arrays, and each array has an array of 2048×2048 pixels. The camera has a field of view of 2.2×2.2 arc minutes with an angular resolution of 0.07 arcsec at 2 microns. NIRCam is also equipped with coronagraphs, which helps to collect data on exoplanets near stars. It helps with imaging anything next to a much brighter object, because the coronagraph blocks that light. NIRCam is housed in the Integrated Science Instrument Module, to which it is attached by struts. It is designed to operate at 37 K, so it can detect infrared radiation at this wavelength.

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Pillars of Creation (NIRCam and MIRI Composite Image)

JWST Pillars of Creation -- Custom combination of official NIRCam + MIRI images (GIF + HD still)

JWST NIRCam commissioning image of a darker sky area near Gemini constellation, processed from Webb's MAST database. Enjoy the galaxies!

I love this image of Stephan's Quintet in NIRcam only (near-infrared). You can see individual stars in the closest galaxy in the image, NGC 7320, which is 40 million light years away. 12k x 12k resolution image in comments