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Good news: Netherland’s plan to make working from home a legal right and free trains in Spain

Welcome to our Friday’s good news roundup, a list of positive stories handpicked by our team to make you feel better. Today's stories include:

Watch the video above for more on each story, or read on below.

1. Why the Webb telescope will change the direction of science

Astronomers are calling it the ‘dawn of a new era,’ as NASA revealed the first full-colour images and data from the new James Webb Space Telescope.

It’s given us a breathtaking view of the cosmos, with the deepest and sharpest infrared images of the distant universe to date, and goes beyond anything the Hubble telescope – which has been astronomers’ window into space for the last 30 years – could do.

It shows us galaxies bursting with billions of stars, and stellar nurseries – the clouds of dust and gas in which new stars form.

Astronomers say these photos represent the future of space discovery.

The Webb telescope is a partnership between the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency and is the largest and most powerful space observatory ever built. It gives us access to the very birth of the cosmos, and galaxies that originated more than 13 billion years ago.

Astronomers say the leap in growth in our understanding of the universe will be as great as it was with the Hubble telescope, which is really saying something.

This moment is the result of the combined efforts of about 20,000 engineers, astronomers and technicians over 30 years, with costs of nearly $10 billion.

It will help them to better understand our solar system, black holes, the evolution of stars and exoplanets and… look for closer, potentially habitable worlds.

2. Spain’s government will offer free trains starting in September

In a new plan to combat rising inflation and the energy crisis made

Read more on euronews.com