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NASA Announces De-Orbit Mission For Hubble 488

maglor_83 writes "NASA has announced the end for Hubble. It plans on performing a "robotic de-orbit mission", and apparently its not due to the monetary costs associated with fixing it, but rather the risks involved. NASA's new goals are now manned missions to the moon, as a platform for Mars."
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NASA Announces De-Orbit Mission For Hubble

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  • Scientific payoff (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BWJones ( 18351 ) * on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:13PM (#11602440) Homepage Journal
    OK....... I cannot see what the near term scientific benefit is of sending folks to Mars. Hubble? Hell yeah. The moon? Absolutely, .......but Mars? Look, Hubble has generated more scientific data per dollar than just about any other NASA program as well as helped out more than one project in the defense department and fed data to scientists and scientific organizations world wide. A return to the moon, could certainly function as a refueling point for unmanned missions to other planetary and stellar objects, as well as functioning as a potential resource for mining (with a space elevator which would facilitate this), and a remote optical and radio telescope on the moon could be an extraordinary scientific resource, but I am not sure the payoff of killing Hubble in favor of manned missions to Mars are currently worth it. I would much rather see more investment in sophisticated ground and space based "scopes".

    Given current technology, I see a manned mission to mars as a financial boondogle.

    • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:5, Interesting)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:16PM (#11602464) Homepage Journal
      The moon would be a good place for a prototype space elevator. If it turns out to be a good source for Helium-3, AND we turn out to have a good use for Helium-3, then the moon may be otherwise useful. Mars, on the other hand, offers us the opportunity to do scientific research that simply isn't possible any way other than landing on another planet, and Mars is the most earthlike of planets around (sad as that is) and may have been significantly more earthlike in the past. It's worth going there. As for measurable, immediate scientific benefits, you have to look further than the end of your own nose if you're going to learn anything, and you have to look further than the end of this week if you want to help humanity.
      • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:4, Interesting)

        by BWJones ( 18351 ) * on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:22PM (#11602512) Homepage Journal
        Mars, on the other hand, offers us the opportunity to do scientific research that simply isn't possible any way other than landing on another planet,

        Like what? And what can we not do remotely? Why send astronauts there is what I am asking.

        It's worth going there.

        What I am saying is not that we should not go to Mars. I am saying that sending people to Mars right now would not have the scientific payoff that other investments in our space program might.

        As for measurable, immediate scientific benefits, you have to look further than the end of your own nose if you're going to learn anything,

        Yes, and your point is?

        and you have to look further than the end of this week if you want to help humanity.

        See my above comments on best bang for the buck.

        • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:28PM (#11602569) Homepage Journal
          Part of the scientific process that often goes overlooked is that when you are trying to solve one problem, you often solve other problems that lie along the way, and sometimes you make accidental discoveries that lead to developments that you never thought might be related. Thus, science for science's sake is generally a far more useful [and maybe even noble] pursuit than most of the other things we do.

          Consequently, you really have no idea what kind of bang for the buck will be produced by, comparatively, setting up shop on the moon, and setting up shop on Mars.

          • by Zeinfeld ( 263942 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:46PM (#11602902) Homepage
            Part of the scientific process that often goes overlooked is that when you are trying to solve one problem, you often solve other problems that lie along the way, and sometimes you make accidental discoveries that lead to developments that you never thought might be related. Thus, science for science's sake is generally a far more useful [and maybe even noble] pursuit than most of the other things we do.

            This is trotted out every time that the space program needs justifying and guess what, its bogus. Non stick frying pans were being developed during the Napoleonic wars when the English embargo prevented the French getting their hands on enough cooking grease. Hence LeCreuset.

            It gets even wobblier when you get to the old CERN home of the Web stuff. The folk who go on about that don't mention that CERN never assigned any staff to the Web project directly other than Tim during the time Tim was at CERN. There were three students who worked with Tim and another four people from another group who did the Web because they beleived in it. When it came to setting up the Web consortium the CERN director sent to bat for the Web project EU grant wise told the committee that the priority at CERN was physics and the Web was not considered important.

            Even when you get to communications satelites the story is somewhat murky. Most satelites are being launched by the French or the Chinese and NASA has done its best to make use of those facilities as hard as possible.

            If you want to research networking then give money to networking, if you want to research biochemistry give the money to biochemists. Do not give the money to a bunch of astrophyscists in the hope that they will solve your networking, fusion, and life sciences problems in their spare time. It does not work that way. The only way you can see a return on 'spinoff' research is if you have programs in place to identify and invest in them. NASA ditched all that years ago and there is zero chance of picking any of it up in the current budget cut environment.

            There is no way that shutting down Hubble and spending the money on the space station is going to get even 1% of the science that Hubble has delivered already. The basic problem here is that NASA sees its mission as manned space exploration and that has very little to do with science.

            There is one solution to the problem that has not been discussed much. There were two mirrors made, the bent one that is up there today and the reserve that was made (corectly) by Kodak for testing purposes. The Kodak mirror must still be in storage somewhere, there are duplicates of pretty much all the equipment. the parts could probably be bolted together to make a duplicate for $50 million or even less. The French, Russians and Chinese would probably put it into orbit for $50 million at commercial rates and given the cargo it could probably be done at no cost in return for telescope time.

            The cost of Hubble is almost all in the design. Making a duplicate should be much, much cheaper.

            • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:4, Interesting)

              by Eric Smith ( 4379 ) * on Monday February 07, 2005 @10:39PM (#11603238) Homepage Journal
              The cost of Hubble is almost all in the design. Making a duplicate should be much, much cheaper.
              Not bloody likely, even assuming that your premise is correct, which it might not be.

              First you're assuming that they actually have the correct engineering drawings. A GAO investigation of ISS revealed that although NASA had a system that was supposed to track the ISS engineering drawings, they didn't actually have the correct drawings.

              Secondly, the cost of making a one-off of just about anything goes UP over time, unlike the cost of mass manufacturing items which goes down.

              And third, I doubt that they would build another Hubble even if they could. They wouldn't be able to resist making a lot of changes to take advantage of advances in technology, so the design work would all get redone anyhow, resulting in no net savings.

            • by AndyL ( 89715 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @10:45PM (#11603281)
              Why make a new Hubble? They could just buy back the one in the Smithsonian.
              • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:3, Interesting)

                by Zeinfeld ( 263942 )
                "Why make a new Hubble? They could just buy back the one in the Smithsonian."

                Possibly, I suspect that it is not completely functional and the main mirror may not be the optically accurate one made at a cost of $15 million or so.

                But it would be a good starting point. I'll bet that even the Smithsonian would rather the thing was put to decent use.

                The main problem is the mirror and assembling the whole thing in a dust free environment.

                On the subject of plans, the ISS is a completely different botch up.

            • The basic problem here is that NASA sees its mission as manned space exploration and that has very little to do with science.

              Well that begs an interesting question: why should NASA's mission be scientific? It is the national space agency, I don't see a problem with them working on manned space exploration.
            • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:4, Interesting)

              by Cecil ( 37810 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @12:18AM (#11603801) Homepage
              This is trotted out every time that the space program needs justifying and guess what, its bogus. Non stick frying pans were being developed during the Napoleonic wars when the English embargo prevented the French getting their hands on enough cooking grease. Hence LeCreuset.

              Guess what -- THAT's bogus.

              Great example, by the way. LeCreuset is nonstick cookware, I'll give you that. However, they do not use Teflon for their ceramic cookware. They did not invent Teflon or anything at all similar. They do USE Teflon, however, in their kitchen textiles, as a fabric protector. Because, that's right, teflon is useful for more than non-stick cookware! Hooray!

              In fact, Teflon is among the (at the top of the list I believe, but I'm not willing to back that up) most slippery materials known to man. Not simply the cheapest or most widely available, it is extremely unique.

              I do agree with you in general that the Hubble has delivered far more science than any manned mission ever has. However, I believe both have their merits, and both deserve funding.
            • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @12:38AM (#11603911) Homepage Journal
              "This is trotted out every time that the space program needs justifying and guess what, its bogus. Non stick frying pans were being developed during the Napoleonic wars when the English embargo prevented the French getting their hands on enough cooking grease. Hence LeCreuset."
              You sort of prove the point... You never know what you will develop until you have a strong need. BTW Teflon has nothing to do with the space program. It was developed for the Atomic bomb project. It was uses for seals exposed to Florine.

              "Even when you get to communications satellites the story is somewhat murky. Most satellites are being launched by the French or the Chinese and NASA has done its best to make use of those facilities as hard as possible. "
              THis is just nuts. Of couse sommunications satellites where developed by Nasa and AT&T.

              When you push the state of the art you never know what you will develop. IC based computers where developed for the Apollo program. Why never before? because no needed computer that small before. I mean why would you need a computer smaller than a desk or even a room?
              Remote heart monitoring systems. Why would you need to check someones heartbeat remotely.
              Yes the space station is a waste. Not because it is a bad idea but because it was cut and cut and is now just a shell of what it was going to be. Much like the Shuttle.
              • by Zeinfeld ( 263942 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @01:05AM (#11604028) Homepage
                You never know what you will develop until you have a strong need. BTW Teflon has nothing to do with the space program. It was developed for the Atomic bomb project. It was uses for seals exposed to Florine.

                Hah! see my other post, Teflon was invented in 1938, before the Manhattan project started.

                When you push the state of the art you never know what you will develop. IC based computers where developed for the Apollo program. Why never before? because no needed computer that small before. I mean why would you need a computer smaller than a desk or even a room?

                The USSR did not develop ICs and still put rockets into space. In fact the ICs did not become important in space until after the Appolo program. They were pretty finiky until the 1970s.

                Kilby was funded by Texas Instruments, Noyce by Fairchild. Both companies were working for the Pentagon, not NASA. The first applications for the ICs were in the US Airforce and the minuteman missile (1962). There is a big difference between using an IC in a missile where it has to work for no more than a few minutes and using one in a satelite or such.

                There are certainly links between research fields but space is certainly not unique in having a spinoff effect and you do not get spinoffs without also doing basic research in the area in question. The World Wide Web put together ideas from twenty years of formal comp sci research with a different perspective to reach the breakthrough.

                I don't see any reason why we should expect that diverting funds from worthwhile science like Hubble to worthless science like the space station is going to result in a net gain through the spinoff effect. Space has been enormously well funded for fifty years. Sending people to the moon does not create any seriously interesting new challenges.

                • by 1u3hr ( 530656 )
                  Sending people to the moon does not create any seriously interesting new challenges.

                  I think building habitats on the moon; mining, prospecting for water, growing plants, building a rail gun launcher, etc, are all extremely interesting challenges; if not ones a theoretical physicist could get very excited about. But a farside lunar radio or light telescope might.

        • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) * on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @12:08AM (#11603744)
          Like what? And what can we not do remotely? Why send astronauts there is what I am asking.

          What can we not do remotely?

          First of all, consider that everything both rovers, combined, have done to date could have been done easily in a day by one human scientist with a buggy. Possibly even on foot.

          Now consider what the rovers have not been able to do, such as going on steep slopes or overly sandy surfaces for fear of getting stuck - things a human could have just walked right over to.

          Now consider the things that are just unthinkable for rovers to explore, like really complex canyon-laced terrain. You just can't send rovers there at all.

          What is to be gained? A deeper understanding of geology and the forces that shape planets - perhaps offering new insights into our own planet. Possibly of course other lifeforms if they probe deep enough. And all the variety of technology that makes working on Mars practical, like improved propulsion systems, life support systems, etc.

          But basically it would be a fantastic boost for the human spirit. Look at how riveted so many people have been to Rover progress, and the Titan mission. Lots of people know about these things and it excites them. It could help to really raise a new generation of engineering minded youth, whereas right now I'd warrant a lot of good potential scientists end up as MBA's or lawyers right now. After all, what is compelling or cool abotu going into science?

          If you want a planet full of lawyers, by all means lets shut down manned space flight and just sue each other for IP infringements every time we make a sandwich. But frankly I hope for a more inspired future.

          I know it may sound crazy to you, but I would quite happily take a trip to Mars knowing I would only live a day and there was no hope of return. And I think there are a lot of other people like that. Let people with the will to explore go forth and inspire others in turn.
      • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:5, Informative)

        by Ford Prefect ( 8777 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:15PM (#11602713) Homepage
        The moon would be a good place for a prototype space elevator.

        No, it wouldn't be. Basic space elevator is essentially just a tower to geostationary orbit. Earth, rotating just over once every day (!), that's an orbit radius of 42,000 km. The Moon's equivalent orbit with it rotating once a month (albeit with lower gravity) is about 90 million km, assuming this back-of-the-envelope calculation is right.

        The best place for a prototype space elevator would be a small asteroid with a fairly high rotation rate - you could probably get away with a few tens of kilometres if chosen carefully...
      • by jelle ( 14827 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @11:20PM (#11603464) Homepage
        If anything is capable of looking beyond the nose into the depths of the Universe, it is Hubble.

        Now, truth of the matter is that they are going to do the 20+ shuttle flights to finish the space station, whose science results have pretty much been limited to 'hey some moss grows in circles in space', and explaining to highschool kids how astronauts live out there. doing valuable circular-growing moss research and all.

        But the risk and cost of single flight to keep Hubble operative is too high, and the 20+ for the space station are worth the cost and risk?

        Right. I'm not convinced.

        This is not about Mars, or the Moon. Mars and the Moon are just decoys. They are only mentioned to make people drool like you are doing.

        Most likely, NASA will never get sufficient funding (and balls) to actually go do it. If it's too risky and too expensive to go fix something in orbit, that has been specifically designed to be fixed, then please tell me, how can flying people to the moon and another planet be affordable and safe?

        Double standards, that's the only way.
        • Not really (Score:3, Insightful)

          by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) *
          If anything is capable of looking beyond the nose into the depths of the Universe, it is Hubble.

          Or one of a number of ground-based scopes that are doing just as well thanks to increases in technology.

        • If anything is capable of looking beyond the nose into the depths of the Universe, it is Hubble.

          Uhmm, no, actually the Hubble is now obsolete.

          [Please read all of this before modding me down.]

          Its generated a lot of pretty pictures, yes. Why are those pretty pictures interesting and valuable? Because they let us look back in time to the early period of the universe. Thats why Hubble was created, not because the public would like the computer-enhanced pretty pictures (you didn't think those pictures we

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Given current technology, I see a manned mission to mars as a financial boondogle.

      Not that financial boondogles have stopped this administration from doing anything. :-P
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:31PM (#11602605)

      Given current technology, I see a manned mission to mars as a financial boondogle.

      This is why we go to the moon first. Of course we can't do it with current technology, and if we keep sending up robots, without the incentive to develop better and faster propulsion, etc., that's all we'll ever have - current technology.

      Get people up to Mars successfully, and we won't waste any more missions because of stupid "convert to metric" errors and the like that have doomed most of the robotic Mars missions to date.

      No more sending up a robot, finding a tantalizing piece of data, and then waiting 5+ years to get the next round of questions answered. This is tedious and silly! Put PEOPLE on the ground with the right equipment for a year, and your precious "science" will start to ROLL in instead of TRICKLING in like it does now!

      (sheesh!)

      Step 1: Moon base.
      Step 2: Build the next generation of spacecraft on the moon
      Step 3: Launch Mars mission from the moon, where the gravity well is shallower.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )
        So the people get there, find out a tantalizing piece of science, and then keep studying it the same way for the next year. Humans, just like robots, are limited by what scientific insturments they have available to them. Mobility? Any craft that could carry a human could go even further if you didn't strap the dead-weight human to it.

        The only thing you gain by having people on the ground is reduced latency. However, it's hard to justify the tremendously increased cost of sending humans along when late
    • Re:Scientific payoff (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:04PM (#11602648) Homepage
      Actually, apart from using it as a shield against EM interference coming from Earth, there's not all that much to be gained from sticking a radio telescope on the moon. You'd have to either make it small enough to land intact, or build the thing in-situ as well, plus you'd have to relay any data around the moon, most likely via a satellite unless you want a second base station and someone laying a lot of fibre...

      A better idea would be to build two orbiting radio telescopes in Earth's orbital path, on opposite sides of the sun and with the same orbital velocity as that of Earth. This essentially fixes the Earth and the two telescopes in place relative to each other and keeps line of sight communications between Earth and each of the satellites at all times. Massage the resultant data together via the wonders of very long baseline interferometry and you effectively have an single radio telescope the diameter of Earth's orbit.

    • It has nothing to do with Scientific payoff and everything to do with Electoral votes. If you wanted to pick up a key southern state, say Florida, and you knew that their key reason for existence was about to disappear, you might want to invent an extremely expensive, open ended, project to keep thousands of potential voters employed. Let's face it, the Mars Rovers and Cassini probe have demonstrated pretty conclusively that space exploration is a job for the bots. They are cheaper, more tolerant of extreme
      • Hate to break it to you, but Florida's economy is not driven by NASA. Cape Canaveral and its suburbs house only a tiny fraction of the population there. Saying that NASA is their "key reason for existence" is simply retarded.
    • NASA's sole purpose isn't science -- if it was, it'd just be rolled into the National Science Foundation. That said, I'm a big fan of spending the money instead on the Hubble Origins Probe [jhu.edu] -- hopefully we'll see that happen.

      Your argument though reminds me a little bit of something I once saw, which said that all/most space advocates were either Saganites, O'Neillians, or Von Braunians (each named after a famous figure in the space field). The descriptions are as follows:

      Saganites: "Look, but don't touch
    • You can't see it because you are looking in the wrong spot. You are only thinking of what NASA has told us is "science" on Mars: poking and scraping rocks and taking pictures of dirt.

      Your assertion regarding Hubble returning more scientific data per dollar is specious. The Apollo program has resulted in hundreds of billions if not trillions of dollars worth of scientific data and technological advancement and products. Even as recent as the last 9 months has some of the original Apollo data been used to cr
  • When? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Odo ( 109839 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:14PM (#11602449)
    When do they intend to deorbit Hubble? As I understand it, the first thing expected to die on Hubble are the gyroscopes. One needs three gyros to point the scope at a celestial target. The deorbit module will definitely have its own pointing system (used for docking, among other things). Which means the mere presence of the deorbit module would fix Hubble. So what's their criteria for dropping Hubble into the Pacific?
    • It wouldn't be nearly accurate enough, nor would it be built for long term use, due to it's relatively simple job.
    • the idea is to bring it down while they still have "robotic" control. There is no robot to send up to bring it down. They want to be able to command it down, in a nice target path, not some crapshoot deorbit when it goes bad and they can no longer control it due to gyroscope failure. BTW my father worked on pointing and control on Hubble. I'm no expert, but I've spent many nights asking him a lot of questions about Hubble.
      • by Odo ( 109839 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:00PM (#11602631)
        > There is no robot to send up to bring it down. They want to be able to command it down [...] BTW my father worked on pointing and control on Hubble. I'm no expert, but I've spent many nights asking him a lot of questions about Hubble.

        Oh man, you seriously need to have another chat with your dad. Hubble can point itself in any direction thanks to its gyros. But it doesn't have any engines. It couldn't deorbit itself if it wanted to. They have full control over where Hubble looks, but not where it goes. To deorbit Hubble you need a robotic deorbit module (aka a rocket).

        For more information, see this page [cbd-net.com]:

        HUBBLE ROBOTIC VEHICLE DEORBIT MODULE (HRVDM)

        Contract Award Date: DTD 092404
        Contract Award Number: CNT NNG05EA01C
        Contract Award Amount: AMT $330,578,914
        Contractor: TO Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company

        [Off topic] While Googling for the above I found this generated ad:

        Find HUBBLE DEORBIT MODULE at eBay [kanoodle.com]
        Looking for hubble deorbit module? eBay has great deals on new and used electronics, cars, apparel, collectibles, sporting goods and more. If you can't find it on eBay, it probably doesn't exist.
        http://www.eBay.com
        • on Hubble there are reaction wheels and magnetic torquers. there are no thrusters. Hubble can manage its orbit with the reaction wheels and magnetic torquers which interact with the Earth's magnetic field. They cannot provide a large amount of force but like pushing a swing, a little push here and a little push there... Maybe use some atmospheric drag here and there... I would think that NASA would try to save money on hardware and try some orbital mechanics to bring it down without developing a "deorbi
          • by helioquake ( 841463 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:35PM (#11602841) Journal
            If the satellite is smaller, one would attempt to position a satellite to maximize its drag force with magnetic torquers and IRW. It makes it easier, too, if the Sun is active (*). By dragging it, it slows its revolution rate, which leads to decay in orbital altitude. We've downed satellites this way a few times. But the HST is probably too large to do this safely.

            CGRO was designed to be de-orbited at its end and had a thruster. I guess NASA really was planning to bring the Hubble down with the Columbia, since it has none of that.

            (*) when the Sun is very active, it puffs up the scale height of the atmosphere. In turn it increases the particle density in the low earth orbit, which leads to a greater drag force.
    • Re:When? (Score:3, Informative)

      by stienman ( 51024 )
      1. Pointing an object that has as much mass as the hubble is expensive enough as it is. To create a robot that would attach, and have enough energy (via solar cells, I suppose you expect?) to rotate both itself and Hubble would be cost-prohibitive, even if it could be developed, tested, and built in time to save the Hubble in time.

      2. There is more equipment on the Hubble that is failed or will soon fail than just the Gyros. The batteries, some of the subsystems, and probably the gas canisters used to b
  • by ari_j ( 90255 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:15PM (#11602453)
    I hope part of it lands on my field. I just haven't had anything to sell on eBay for a couple years. (I am not referring to Columbia. That's just wrong.)
  • In headline after headline talking about Hubble and how they need money to repair it and what-not, I've never seen a single mention of what's actually wrong with it and why it needs "repairing".

    What's the deal?
    • by wikinerd ( 809585 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:23PM (#11602523) Journal
      You can learn why a fourth servicing mission is necessary by reading my article [wikinerds.org]. I say: "several components of Hubble, most probably its batteries, are expected to stop operating in the next 2-4 years" and "HST was designed to be maintained with servicing missions operated from space shuttles every few years" (i.e. it is impossible to keep Hubble there without launching servicing missions, we need to fix its orbit and replace components every few years). In addition, the gyroscopes will also stop working, but I think the most important problem will be its batteries (Hubble can work with just 2 or 3 gyroscopes, but not with dead batteries).
    • The gyroscopes are wearing out. They've done so before and been replaced, but they're going again and the batteries are fading. Without at least 3 gyroscopes Hubble can't be pointed accurately, and with less it starts having trouble maintaining attitude control and could potentially start to tumble and deorbit.
    • by blamanj ( 253811 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:30PM (#11602590)
      It doesn't need repairing today, but it will in a couple of years [linuxinsider.com]. The batteries and gyroscopes have limited lifetimes and must be replaced every so often. These cyclic repair missions, which have been performed in the past, were cancelled after the Columbia [nasa.gov] accident

      While they could restart the repair cycle, NASA no longer feels that repair flights are safe, because, unlike when the Shuttle visits ISS, there are no good rescue options given Hubble's orbit.
  • Thanks for all the great pictures.
  • That doesn't make any sense. About the only thing that would be the similar between a Mars mission and Moon mission would be terrestrial (or arestrial or lunestrial as the case may be) vehicles.

    The moon doesn't have an atmosphere, Mars does. The moon has 1/2 the gravity of Mars. (1/6g vs. 1/3g.) The moon is three days away, Mars is six months, minimum. The Moon has a 28-day sol, Mars has a 24.75 hour sol. Mars has water, the moon's water is still under question. The moon has huge temperature swings; Mars..

    • by Anonymous Coward
      what?

      it's a lot harder to launch from earth to mars than it would be to launch from the moon to mars

      build a moon launch base, build a mars lander vehicle from the moom.. no athmosphere to require you to go like 18X sound to break free (pulling number from ass)

      plus the moon probably has stuff we could use for fuel and whatnot

      plus if we go to mars it cant be just for a couple days, we need a base.. the best way to to learn how to build a working base in space is to practice on the moon.. that way if you f
    • Article wasn't speaking platform in the metaphorical sense, but actually a platform in the literal sense, as in, to launch missions from there to mars, and refuel, etc.
    • I have to agree. The moon is an out-of-the-way destination to go to Mars. It's as if we wanted to fly on a 747 from NYC to London for a weekend, but when we took off the plane diverted to Orlando for a week and we spent most of our vaction money at Disney World prior to arriving in London. Just as the time spent in Orlando is a waste of our London vacation, the moon would be waste of our Mars exploration money. Other than both being accessable by air and are tourist destinations they have very little in co
      • by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:17PM (#11602727) Journal
        You seem to have little concept of the situation.

        A rocket/shuttle/anything uses up pretty much ALL of its fuel just to get off the ground. If we could land on the moon, not only could we go faster (full fuel + no air + moon swinging around) it would be safer because the mission would have spare fuel to use on the way to Mars. Plus you have enough fuel to get back since you would be using a capapult+rockets to get on your way.

  • by Kenja ( 541830 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:18PM (#11602489)
    Will Taco Bell be doing another of their brain dead marketing schemes [salon.com] and offer free food like sudstance if the Hubble hits an a given target?
    • by The Good Reverend ( 84440 ) <michael@michris. c o m> on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:38PM (#11602858) Journal
      The fact that you're still talking about it, and know it was Taco Bell, 4 years later is a pretty good sign that it's absolutely not a "brain dead marketing scheme". It was a no-lose situation for the company. Consider:

      Situation 1: Target is missed. It still captures the public's imagination, gets people talking, makes people like you bring up the event years later. To marketing departments, this kind of exposure is exactly what they love.

      Situation 2: Target is hit. They have to give away upwards of 300,000,000 tacos. Except, no where near everyone would go, and those that do would likely order a drink, burrito, or other side dish. Even if none of them did, it's still eyeballs and foot traffic, not to mention amazing amounts of publicity. That, and the promotion was insured.

      That silly little $40,000 blow-up target is one of the best things that company every did for itself, second only to a talking dog.
      • 4 years later? Wha...?

        I first saw this Taco Bell hit-the-target-win-a-prize thing this past year during the baseball playoffs. Game 3 of the NLCS (Cardinals vs. Astros) had one of these targets in Homer's Landing in Busch Stadium. Nobody hit it. :(
  • NASA has it wrong (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Garbonzo Pitts ( 249836 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:19PM (#11602497)
    NASA has consistently pushed the idea that manned space flight gets the public's attention. But the facts indicate otherwise. Photos from the Hubble and interplanetary probes appear on the front pages of newspapers and have a very high "ooh-ahh" factor. In contrast, the public doesn't seem to care at all about astronauts in the space station. Why would they care about people going back to the moon? They've seen those pictures already.
    • In contrast, the public doesn't seem to care at all about astronauts in the space station.

      Well, I know this isn't actually true, but from the John Q Public point of view, the space station crews aren't actually doing anything except fixing the thing they're sitting in and in which they're not doing anything (except eating, apparently).

      Of course, the space station, if funded and built as intended, would be a lot more bustly, but as it is now... no wonder no one thinks about it. You bet they'd be watchi
  • by Engineer Andy ( 761400 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:20PM (#11602504) Journal
    backwards for mankind.

    It's a pity to lose such an excellent scientific tool without a replacement either in train or already deployed
  • It's not the end. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Hrodvitnir ( 101283 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:21PM (#11602507)
    Honestly, all this uproar over downing Hubble is a bit dramatic. It's not the end of space research. We'll keep sending up satellites and they'll keep getting better. There's just going to be a hole fore a few years where we won't get the type of data that hubble was able to provide.

    We will put up a satellite to replace the Hubble. Space isn't going anywhere.
    • Re:It's not the end. (Score:2, Informative)

      by olafva ( 188481 )
      The NASA James Webb [stsci.edu] Space Telescope" [nasa.gov] is "on the way". I've heard the
      images it can obtain will make the Hubble images look like
      junk. Let's move on to the future rather than dwell on the past!
      • Re:It's not the end. (Score:5, Informative)

        by Kiryat Malachi ( 177258 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:17PM (#11602732) Journal
        JWST is not a full replacement for Hubble - it is primarily an IR scope, with some visible capability - it lacks certain wavelengths Hubble covers, like UV, which is one of the primary benefits of launching a space scope in the first place. The band in question, covered by Hubble but not JWST, is the 110nm-600nm band. JWST has significantly more infrared extension than Hubble, but infrared is one of the more usable windows from Earth, especially as adaptive optics techniques improve.

        Basically, JWST is not a full Hubble replacement. A good thing to launch? Yes. But we'll definitely lose some capabilities in the bargain.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    ...how will they know where Mars and/or the moon is?
  • So shortsighted (Score:2, Insightful)

    by eisenbud ( 708663 )
    This is one of the few big budget scientific missions that's had a clear purpose. The space station -- not so much. The shuttle -- takes people to orbit for way too much money (though it would be nice if they could use it once more to fix Hubble.) This is one of the best possible uses of our space dollars, and it's sad that it's being ignored for high profile but not scientifically focused things.
  • by Cutriss ( 262920 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:26PM (#11602559) Homepage
    So, sending a team of astronauts into space just over 600km away, still within the confines of the Van Allen belts, is terribly dangerous, but sending them out a minimum of 55M kilometres is safer?

    This sort of mission was almost *routine* three years ago...and now it's "too risky". Those NASA people sure have turned into wusses. >.>
    • by TheGavster ( 774657 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:32PM (#11602823) Homepage
      I want to know why the moon landing is slated for 2015-2020, while the last time we did it a) not really knowing how to do it and b) in like half the time. Repeating a past mission with modern tech should not be this difficult.
      • by cgenman ( 325138 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @01:53AM (#11604209) Homepage
        Remember, the apollo missions were taking 10% of GDP for the 10 years or so it was active. I doubt this mission will get that kind of funding.

        Plus you're talking about a space agency that goes trolling on eBay for parts to older systems. If they're going to do a moon mission, they're going to have to modernize. Which means re-making a lot of what they had done with a lot of different technology providers.

      • Four reasons I can think of:

        1. They had pretty much all the funding they could possibly want.

        2. Much greater safety paranoia. When the crew of Apollo 1 was killed, NASA fixed the problem and moved on with the program. They didn't paralyze their manned spaceflight program, go into a period of national mourning, and launch congressional investigation committees.

        3. Von Braun and the other German rocket geniuses who essentially designed and built the rockets they used are just about all dead. Granted, there'
  • NASA being american... and the news of this big mission being announced by the.. CBC? (that's Canadian Broadcast Channel for those in the dark)
    • Re:funny.. (Score:3, Funny)

      by Pxtl ( 151020 )
      We Canadians seem to like your space program more than you do... but then again, maybe that's cause we don't have to pay for it, just stick big arms on everything you build.
  • They seem to have lost there way since OKeefe took charge three years ago. Space Shuttle mismanaged, Space Station mismanaged, now Hubble mismanaged. Only the Mars probes are doing well, probably because they are subcontracted outside of NASA.
  • by SteeldrivingJon ( 842919 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:30PM (#11602589) Homepage Journal

    It's about money.

    The budget Bush just submitted cuts the Hubble.
  • Risks too High? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:30PM (#11602593) Homepage Journal
    Right, so we've heard the story - they don't want to send astronauts to Hubble because in case of damage to the shuttle they can't get into a higher orbit to dock with the ISS.

    OK, fine, and I admit Hubble is probably too expensive to patch up and the money would be better spent on a new telescope.

    But since sending Astronauts to Hubble is too risky they're going to send Astronauts to MARS instead? This does not compute.
  • It's official... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rasafras ( 637995 ) <(tamas) (at) (pha.jhu.edu)> on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:30PM (#11602599) Homepage
    NASA is dead. When you claim risk and safety as a high priority for exploration and scientific conquest, you know you aren't going to get anywhere. Lewis and Clark didn't wait for the invention of the SUV before going cross-country, they just went ahead and did it.
    I'm not saying that exploration should cut corners and put people in unnecessary danger, but there are astronauts willing to risk going up to do things like this. Face it, shooting somebody into the sky on a giant bomb is inherently unsafe, and that's something you've just got to accept. I understand that another accident for NASA would cut approval and potentially cost them far more money, and I'm saying that that's the problem. Trying to be unnecessarily safe is going to cost them far too much money, and that's money that they most likely don't have and won't have to spend.
    (I was referring to the Mars mission as well)
  • by TheOriginalRevdoc ( 765542 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:31PM (#11602610) Journal
    Yippee!

    It's gonna be just the ISS. They'll spend billions designing amazing machines, the budget will be cut 50%, they'll redesign, the budget will be cut another 50%, they'll redesign again, then they'll put up a half-arsed end result that barely meets its mission requirements.

    Then the astronauts will hang out on the moon, kicking rocks and wondering what the hell they're doing there. They'll do a trial collection of Helium 3, but there won't be any point, because there's no use for Helium 3, even if we could get it back to Earth.

    Eventually, the engineers will admit publicly that getting to the moon doesn't contribute to getting to Mars in any meaningful way, but boy oh boy, the contractors sure made a shitload of cash off the project, didn't they?

    And isn't that what American politics is all about?
  • Hubble will go down is history as one of the most important space missions ever. It has proved invaluable to the scientific community and a generation has grown up with it flying over-head.

    Goodbye Hubble, you will be missed =(

  • by fygment ( 444210 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @08:59PM (#11602625)
    We have Hubble which:

    1) captured the public imagination. How many posters have you seen bearing pictures from SOHO, Chandra, or any IR camera? How many kids turned on to astronomy after seeing a Keck picture?

    2) is known to a huge swath of the public. How many know of SOHO?

    3) has a very positive track record. How much bad publicity has Hubble generated for NASA? It was recovered heroically from its intial flaws and has performed stunningly ever since.

    In its place:

    1) a cosmologists dream machine (read: pictures in the IR that show little blobs of the early universe). Not for public consumption.

    2) no inspiring name has been fielded though there is time to fix that. NGST? But Hubble was the first so NGST faces an uphill battle.

    3) a telescope many people don't want so money can be diverted to a mission fraught with more danger and potential bad publicity than a space walk.

    So getting the axe is: a popular, inspiring, positive public face for NASA. In its place, an item on the drawing boards to free up cash for a truly extreme mission. Begging the question, can NASA make any good decisions?
    • Begging the question, can NASA make any good decisions?

      You're forgetting, they have to answer to the US Government. So I guess your actually getting at the question of whether the US Government can make any good decisions.

      I leave the answer as an exercise for the reader (Hint: No.)

      -S ...

      PS. To be honest ... given NASA's budgetary, political, and social constraints ... I'm just impressed that they manage to get any science done at all.
  • by cutecub ( 136606 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:05PM (#11602654)
    ...but I think I'll have to dust off my old "Official SkyLab Target" T-Shirt.

    Seeing as the Government usually can't hit the broad side of a planet, its a pretty fair bet that making myself a target ( again ) will prevent any possibility of me getting hit by Hubble when it crashes.

    Cue SNL video of John Belushi smashing his SkyLab model into a Globe of the Earth

  • by mcguyver ( 589810 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:06PM (#11602663) Homepage
    - Dave Chappelle in 'The Black President'
    Googled Videos [google.com]
  • tektites, anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by jpellino ( 202698 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:23PM (#11602765)
    that's one honkin' big piece of glass... 1 ton, melts at about 1500F...
  • Hubble was one of the first casualties of the Challenger explosion. Remember that the first thing that needed to be fixed was a flawed mirror?

    While I was in undergrad at UT, I was an officer in the local SEDS chapter, where Dr. Hans Mark explained that the mirror was known to be flawed before it was launched. When the Challenger exploded, NASA shut down everything. Hubble remained, unrepaired, in a dark warehouse somewhere. When they got the HST program back up and running, they'd long forgotten their problem with the mirror.

    HST was a great idea, but there were some big screwups attached to it.
  • by Zobeid ( 314469 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:51PM (#11602935)
    Saturn V
    Skylab
    Hubble

    Whenever you get something that's a really huge engineering success or scientific success -- or both -- you proceed to scrap it. Then apply the money saved to other programs that are on their way to becoming hopeless boondoggles (re: shuttle, ISS, Moon-Mars initiative).
  • by wildsurf ( 535389 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @09:53PM (#11602943) Homepage
    As long as they're sending a booster to Hubble, why not just boost it into a higher orbit, where it can stay parked for another several years, at which time we might have better means to do something useful with it?

    Perhaps even bring it down safely for museum display?

    It seems like a waste to send the booster all the way up there just to destroy the telescope.
    • by JungleBoy ( 7578 ) on Monday February 07, 2005 @11:21PM (#11603474)

      Perhaps even bring it down safely for museum display?


      Hubble was scheduled to be brought down and put in the smithsonian. In fact, the display mount is already in the air & space museum (or was a couple years ago when I visited). The problem is that the Colombia was the only shuttle decked out to down mass the Hubble. All the other orbiters are setup with an airlock and docking port for the ISS. Hubble won't fit in the cargo hold of those orbiters now.
  • by matusa ( 132837 ) <chisel@nOspAm.gmail.com> on Monday February 07, 2005 @10:35PM (#11603210) Homepage
    I was chatting with Marvin Minsky a few days ago, we started bitching about space, and he had this sad story to relate:

    Once some of the ISS modules were relatively complete and ready for launch, NASA rounded up a group of dignitaries to bless it (I can't think of another reason why they were called in, and you'll see why I had more interesting things to ask about..), and he noticed an engineer really screwing up a docking procedure. He asked why they didn't just have a simple bit of robotics to handle it (any of a billion implementations would work great for something this trivial), and the answer was that NASA had dictated from high up that a human must be the operator for a wide class of tasks.

    So there you have it! The space industry has some luddite motivations, which is absolutely terrifying. And unfortunately the great success of JPL/Caltech's probes gives more justification of their _small_ budgets (wow! you're so great you can keep being great with only $10 !!); I guess a large set of the administration still feels a need to justify 'manhood'. fucking retards.
  • by flacco ( 324089 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @12:43AM (#11603945)
    people are starting to talk about pointing the hubble at the lunar landing sites to see the landing craft and other remaining artifacts, only to find that they're not there.

    if the truth were to get out that it was all a cold-war hoax, it would send american self-esteem into a crisis.

  • by Whatsmynickname ( 557867 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @02:02AM (#11604251)

    Quoting from an online article: "NASA had considered a robotic servicing mission, but now doubts the technology would be mature enough before Hubble suffers a fatal equipment breakdown."

    Well, let me get this straight. They don't want to repair the Hubble with a manned mission. Well, OK. Assuming no planned repair, the Hubble is guaranteed to fail anyways. So, what's the risk of trying a robotic repair mission? They are spending the money to make a robot to bring down the Hubble, so why not at least try a robot that will attempt to repair the Hubble? If it doesn't work, oh well, it was coming down anyways, right?

    My God, it's quite evident that NASA has SO lost any initiative to take any risk at all now.

  • A long, sad night... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mbrother ( 739193 ) <mbrother@uwyoWELTY.edu minus author> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @03:47AM (#11604566) Homepage
    I really thought we could keep Hubble going until the James Webb Telescope goes up. Guess not. The proposal I just put in last month might be my last chance to do a new Hubble project (failure is expected for 2007, but could be sooner, or a little later). I've got some grant money to hire a postdoc, and one of my friends who currently works at Space Telescope is going to call me about it tomorrow. He says morale there is awful, and many are looking for outs. They'll be running James Webb, too, so there will be things to do, but still...

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