Saving Hubble 69
tassii writes "In this article on Space.com, Hubble Space Telescope operators plan to ask Russia for help in keeping the observatory alive and will even consider accepting private donations, which have already been offered. The upgrades are already built, waiting for installation. The Wide Field Camera 3 and the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph cost a combined $167 million and will provide unprecedented peeks into the formation of the cosmos, astronomers say. Maybe there is still some hope for the Hubble."
Great Idea! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great Idea! (Score:2)
D
Re:Great Idea! (Score:1)
The GNP of Norrath falls somewhere between Bulgaria and Russia [ssrn.com]
Just do it... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Re:Just do it... (Score:4, Interesting)
Long-baseline parallax observations of stars for more precise mapping of the local spiral arm, for one.
Possibly long-baseline infereometry, for two (although it might not work in this instance--I'm not so savvy here).
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Well, some of them are smart and, yes, they have considered this. The technique goes under the name "secular parallax". One minor problem is that not only is the solar system sailing through space, so are all the other stars. By observing the position of many stars over a period of many years it's possibl
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Wouldn't that really anger Dr. Forrester?
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Someone should get one of the bright sparks who cancelled the old Star Trek, before its time, to tell Bush what a mistake that turned out to be. :-)
Re:Just do it... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
Very true
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
What's the point of moving it anywhere, given that when the gyros are bust the thing can't be pointed anyway?
Paul
Re:Just do it... (Score:2)
I wasn't aware of that. Thanks for the info.
Common sense revolution (Score:4, Insightful)
Having other countries involved, especially one with decades of expertise like Russia, and encouraging private investments (more like donations really) is exactly what space exploration needs.
We need to focus less on government sponsored, election engineering, military application thoughts and more on collaboration for world betterment. And world betterment can come from scientific discovery, not just decreased drug costs and disposal of cash crop models (though these are high on the list too).
I hope Hubble continues working for decades to come. It's a nice piece of equipment.
Re:Common sense revolution (Score:4, Informative)
Parts are wearing out (two of the 6 gyros have already failed - and that's AFTER some of them have been replaced on shuttle missions), and it actually uses consumables (like orientation thruster propellant), so it always HAD a limited lifespan. In fact - it's projected life span is just about up.
There WERE plans to capture it, bring it home, 'refurbish' it, and redeploy, but the shuttle is required for this. It looks like Hubble will limp along for a little, but it's not expected to survive past 2007.
In fact, NASA has been planning on replacing it for decades - that was always the original plan. I don't know how much the James Webb Space Telescope [nasa.gov] has been affected by the shake up in NASA, but it's been meant to replace the HST for a while now.
Re:Common sense revolution (Score:2, Informative)
IANARS, so I wonder... (Score:2)
My thinking is along the lines of 'one destination=cheaper than two'...
Re:IANARS, so I wonder... (Score:1)
You've got it backwards.
HST is, IIRC, at the nearest LaGrange point to Earth. It's a heck of a hike there and back, and missions have been cancelled to hubble simply because it's so @#$#!ing far out.
ISS, OTOH, is at an unstable LEO--so that Soyuz rockets can reach it.
I would hope that, in the next 20 years or so, we move the ISS to where Hubble is, not the other way around.
Altitude of HST & ISS (Score:2)
Whaddayaknow? The HST is at about 600km, and the ISS is at about 375km. (God bless Google)
OK, would there be any issues with lowering the HST to join the ISS?
Re:Altitude of HST & ISS (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Altitude of HST & ISS (Score:2)
Doesn't the HST require regular parts replacement? I seem to recall the gyros don't last forever. Getting a crew of mission-trained astronauts to 600km to do those repairs probably has a lot to do with the need for those support facilities.
I suspect it'd be a whole lot cheaper if all it needed once in orbit were directions on where to point and an earthside antenna to pick up its transmissions.
Re:Altitude of HST & ISS (Score:2)
Yes. The big one is orbit maintenance: the ISS needs periodic boosts (several a year) from the Shuttle or Progress supply rockets to stay at the correct altitude. At 600km, Hubble doesn't need more than one boost after every repair mission.
The other worry is stationkeeping: Hubble and the ISS may start out near each other, but one of them (probably the ISS) will have higher atmospheric drag than the other, so they will tend to drift.
Re:Altitude of HST & ISS (Score:1)
Yes. The reason given for scrapping the HST service mission was that in the event of a problem, the space shuttle would not be able to reach the (relative) safety of the ISS. If the shuttle alone can't go that way, dragging the HST along seems rather far-fetched. IIRC it's not the altitude that's the problem, but that one is in a far more polar orbit than the other.
- nic
Re:IANARS, so I wonder... (Score:3, Informative)
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing...
Check this [l5news.org].
"They lie at equal distance from Earth and Moon, in the Moon's orbit..."
The stable L-points are as far away as the MOON!!! L4 and L5 are the stable ones - in that they are 'self-correcting' - put something in L4 or L5, knock it out of position, and as long as you didn't knock it TOO hard, it will return to the L-point. The others are like balancing on a pin. If you 'slip' you keep getting pushed AWAY from the L-poin
Re:IANARS, so I wonder... (Score:2)
Preserving hubble (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Preserving hubble (Score:2, Insightful)
(OT) Much better article title (Score:1, Funny)
first we need to save Spirit! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:first we need to save Spirit! (Score:1, Informative)
Situation doesn't sound completely hopeless:
Donations (Score:3, Funny)
Science and History (Score:2)
With the shuttles out of the question, we don't currently have the ability to bring it down in one piece... or even safely. It appears that all agree we should send up a robot tug of some sort to gain control of Hubble's orbit and keep it from falling on Topeka.
If we're goin
Re:Science and History (Score:1)
What is in Topeka worth saving?
Anyway, I think tornadoes are a bigger threat to Topeka than a falling telescope will ever be...
JWST (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with Hubble is its size.. if it comes back into the atmosphere in a de-orbit, the mirror and the titanium ring holding it will probably make it to terra firma in pretty much one piece.
I _REALLY_ dont want that landing on my house!
At the very least, they need to keep nudging the sucker.. or put a controllable burn-pod on it so they can bump it up remotely, rather than doing the catch and release job they have been with teh Shuttles.
The main reason.. according to a couple of sites I read.. is if something fails on the shuttle while it as at the ISS, they can get home in the "lifeboat". If it fails while they are at Hubble, they are skrewed.
man..can you imagine if cars, or trains, or airplanes were held to the same safety measures as NASA is now holding itself to?
You wouldnt be allowed to leave the house without a bubble on.
Maeryk
Re:JWST (Score:3, Interesting)
This gives me an interesting idea... Would it be possible to place a soyuez capsule in orbit right next to the hubble or even attach it to the hubble?
That being said, it brings up concerns that such a device isn't carried with the shuttle on ALL shuttle missions. The capsule itself is really qui
Re:JWST (Score:3, Interesting)
Has there ever been a "space disaster" in which one of these would actually work? I know the two shuttle missions.. there wasnt time to implement it if it
Re:JWST (Score:1)
Inclination (Score:2)
Re:JWST (Score:1)
Re:JWST (Score:2)
Problem is, AFAIK, any attitude jets on Hubble are only enough to orient it.. and I'm not sure they
Re:JWST (Score:1)
they will re-name the telescope to... (Score:1)
Hubble Service Missions (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hubble Service Missions (Score:1)
What about us? (Score:2)
Re:What about us? (Score:2)
Re:What about us? (Score:1)
An appropriately structured campaign, via schools, teachers, et al, to sell the Hubble t
Impossible. (Score:2)
You can help! (Score:1)
CAIB assumes NASA can't learn! (Score:1)
I am quite knowledgeable in the area of Spacecraft, reentry considerations, and thermal protection systems.
Both times the Shuttle has blown up has been due to misoperation! NOT due to inherent flaws in the Shuttle. The first time was due to flying it in TOO cold an environment (the O rings), which NASA WAS aware of. The second time