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Space Science

Repair Costs for Hubble Are Vexing to Scientists 508

wallstreetprodigy23 writes "Some scientists questioned whether a repair mission for the aging Hubble Space Telescope was worth a projected cost of $1 billion to $2 billion at a hearing of the House Science Committee on Wednesday. Both scientists and legislators praised the orbiting observatory for the many contributions it had made to science since it was launched in 1990. But the telescope needs servicing to continue working... "
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Repair Costs for Hubble Are Vexing to Scientists

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  • Peanuts (Score:4, Insightful)

    by fembots ( 753724 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:41PM (#11565360) Homepage
    If this [cnn.com] can be justified, I think a toy like Hubble should be affordable.

    However, our parents always tell us they can't afford 10 cents for that yummy candy because they just bought a $40K car.
    • And don't even get me started on universal health care...
      • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:46PM (#11565413)
        "And don't even get me started on universal health care..."

        "If you think health care is expensive now, wait until you see what it costs when it's free." - P J O'Rourke (1947- )"

        • by Anonymous Coward
          "Argument by quotation is silly" -- Anonymous Coward (???? -- present)
        • "If you think health care is expensive now, wait until you see what it costs when it's free."

          Less [newsbatch.com] than it does now?

          I've heard estimates that suggest up to ten percent of spending on healthcare in the U.S. is related to billing and insurance issues--just figuring out who has to pay for what. Public health care at least solves that problem, plus it usually fixes a schedule of fees and precisely delineates what procedures are covered.

    • Re:Peanuts (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Indeed. The couple billion for Hubble is a tiny fraction of the unaccounted for and otherwise lost [brunei-online.com] money in Iraq.
    • Agreed (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Ryan C. ( 159039 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:45PM (#11565406)
      That 1-2 Billion buys you Human advancement, however large or small, that is permanent. Permanent so long as that 80 Billion we just spent on war doesn't wipe it out.

    • Re:Peanuts (Score:2, Insightful)

      Mod the parent up! (I can't. My mod points expired yesterday).

      Before the pro-Bush posters come about trying to justify why another $80 billion is being sent down the proverbial black hole, think about this: this isn't the first nor will it be the last request from Bush for more money to finance his egotistical campaigns (excluding Afghanistan which is justified). In six months he'll be asking for another $40-50 billion and find some other excuse to justify the cost.

      Now, back on point, if spending $1-2 b
      • Re:Peanuts (Score:5, Insightful)

        by TheFlyingGoat ( 161967 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:58PM (#11565565) Homepage Journal
        There's two things to respond to in your post:

        1. $1-2 billion might not be a good investment for the Hubble. If that money is applied to the design of a replacement satellite, or possibly a replacement for the shuttles, then we might gain even more by NOT spending on the Hubble. It's a cost tradeoff issue, and is hardly a simple decision to make. It's a decision that can only be made when looking at the entire NASA budget (which Slashdot posts never do).

        I'd personally like to see $1-2 billion go towards a replacement for the shuttles, since that would greatly reduce the maintenance costs for satellites down the line.

        2. The anti-Bush rhetoric is getting old. There's many reason we should or shouldn't be in Iraq, but the fact remains that we ARE in Iraq. We should not leave anytime soon (most reasonable people can agree with that), since the entire thing would have been in vain. So, we're stuck with paying the $80 billion per year for the next few years.

        At this point it does no good to complain about the extra money required for Iraq, since it's going there no matter what. It's far more important to determine how agencies will make better use of their reduced funding... like deciding if the Hubble should be repaired or if the money should be spent on something else.
        • Re:Peanuts (Score:4, Informative)

          by bigpat ( 158134 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:53PM (#11566173)
          It's a decision that can only be made when looking at the entire NASA budget (which Slashdot posts never do).

          So here you go: http://www.nasa.gov/about/budget/

          It's far more important to determine how agencies will make better use of their reduced funding... like deciding if the Hubble should be repaired or if the money should be spent on something else.

          Or not at all, don't forget that most important option. It is not like this money is sitting in some big pile and will go to waste if we don't use it. We are borrowing from social security and foreign institutions in order to pay for a 400 billion dollar yearly deficit, so it is not just a matter of what to spend money on, it is also a question of whether the money should be spent at all.
    • by sheldon ( 2322 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:10PM (#11565680)
      Hell, we're now spending our tax dollars to buy Viagra for seniors.

      link here [sfgate.com]

      As a friend of mine put it. The seniors have been screwing over the young for years... now they've got Viagra to help.

  • $1 billion? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Zardus ( 464755 ) <yans@yancomm.net> on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:42PM (#11565371) Homepage Journal
    How much would a new telescope cost? I mean, $1 billion is a lot for repair costs -- if a new one costs somewhere around there, why not just replace hubble altogether?
    • Re:$1 billion? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Ryan Stortz ( 598060 ) <ryan0rz@gLISPmail.com minus language> on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:47PM (#11565422)
      We have Hubble now though, and there really isn't anything wrong with it. A new space telescope would take years to design, build, and then launch. There is one in the works, but it doesn't catch the visible light spectrum as well as Hubble can. It's for different purposes. Plus I'm pretty sure they both costed more than a billion.
      • "there really isn't anything wrong with it" yet "1-2 billion" repair costs. I'd hate to see how much it'd cost to repair if there was actually some serious repairs required.

        I vote for a new telescope that's easier to repair. Not that my vote counts.

        • It costs an awful lot to launch the Shuttle. I don't really follow Hubble's status, but I think they just want to fix a gyroscope or something. Then add a few things on and refill it's tanks. I think it'll go until 2010 right now, and it's booked solid by scientists.
    • Re:$1 billion? (Score:2, Informative)

      by ppz003 ( 797487 )
      How much would a new telescope cost? I mean, $1 billion is a lot for repair costs -- if a new one costs somewhere around there, why not just replace hubble altogether?

      $1.5 billion [nasa.gov]. But that was just to build it. NASA claims it would cost much less to service and repair the Hubble rather than to launch a new one into service.
    • Re:$1 billion? (Score:5, Informative)

      by PortHaven ( 242123 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:49PM (#11565451) Homepage
      It is being replaced. The Hubble is expected to end service around 2010. The James Webb Space Telescope, a large infrared-optimized space telescope, is scheduled for launch in August, 2011.

      JWST is designed to study the earliest galaxies and some of the first stars formed after the Big Bang. These early objects have a high redshift from our vantage-point, meaning that the best observations for these objects are available in the infrared. JWST's instruments will be designed to work primarily in the infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum, with some capability in the visible range.

      JWST will have a large mirror, 6.5 meters (20 feet) in diameter and a sunshield the size of a tennis court. Both the mirror and sunshade won't fit onto the rocket fully open, so both will fold up and open only once JWST is in outer space.

      JWST will reside in an L2 Lissajous orbit, about 1.5 million km (1 million miles) from the Earth.

      • Err, I think you mean it will be at the second Lagrange point (L2). [stsci.edu].

        Actually, it'll be in orbit round the L2 point, but now I'm just getting picky.

        I think you'll find that the French physicist Lissajous [google.com] had very little to do with orbital dynamics, and much more to do with fascinating sqiggly loop patterns that provide endless entertainment for thost supposed to be learning how to use an oscilloscope.

        • by reverseengineer ( 580922 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:59PM (#11566254)
          No, the grandparent is correct- the James West Space Telescope will indeed be in a Lissajous orbit- that is the name for a particular type of orbit around a Lagrange point and is a slight variation on the simpler "halo" orbit (basically just an ellipse or circle around the Lagrange point). This may seem counterintuitive, as the Lagrange points are just empty points in space, but in fact you can orbit spacecraft around them just as you would any celestial body. In the case of (IIRC) Langrange points L1, L2, and L3, you pretty much have to do this- those points are unstable, so some station keeping is required (about once a month at L2). The principal advantage of the quasiperiodic Lissajous orbit at L2 is that it experiences fewer eclipses (L2 is collinear with the sun and earth), important for probes using solar panels. An example of a recent mission using a Lissajous orbit around L2 was the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe.
      • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:31PM (#11565943)
        Wow, not only did you copy and paste [slashdot.org] that, but the post is a dupe [slashdot.org].
    • Loss Leader (Score:2, Funny)

      by ackthpt ( 218170 ) *
      How much would a new telescope cost? I mean, $1 billion is a lot for repair costs -- if a new one costs somewhere around there, why not just replace hubble altogether?

      NASA should have read the contract, Hubble was a loss leader for the manufacturer. As we all know the profit is all in the servicing of it.

      Hubble $$$

      Replacement gyro - $5,000

      Replacement screw - $0.05

      Replacement nut - $0.05

      House call - $1,000,000,000.00

    • Re:$1 billion? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:53PM (#11565501) Journal
      Hubble has a rather bright design, being modular, it can be upgraded considerably. I would suspect designing and building an orbital telescope to equal Hubble would cost many billions of dollars.

      The loss of Hubble, while somewhat offset by new technologies that increase the abilities of ground-based telescopes, would still be an enormous blow to astronomers and cosmologists. It has been an extraordinarily useful tool, and to my mind, letting die and then pushing it into the ocean in 2012 is about a horrible fate as I can imagine.

      Unfortunately NASA is burdened with that collosal waste of cash, the International Space Station. Hubble does more scientific work in a month than the ISS is every likely to do. If anything should be pushed into a decaying orbit, it should be that big fat waste of cash.
  • by drunkennewfiemidget ( 712572 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:42PM (#11565376)
    Here [space.com]
  • Another Option (Score:5, Interesting)

    by anzha ( 138288 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:44PM (#11565391) Homepage Journal

    The John Hopkins folks proposed a 'Son of Hubble' [spaceref.com] for that same cost. It would give the same or better scientific data gathering and also be designed to be fixed in an easier fashion, made with more modern tech, etc.

    • You damn litter-bug [space.com]
    • Re:Another Option (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Zutfen ( 841314 )
      This hits me as a more effective use of $1 Billion than repairing the Hubble.
      It would be kind of sad to lose the Hubble after so many years of astounding imagery, but if we can have something even better launched in 5 years for the same price (or there abouts), well that seems to make sense.

      My biggest concern is, can this really be built for $1 Billion, or is it going to turn into $3 Billion? Only to be scrapped because it's becoming "too costly" thus flushing billions down the crapper, as our government
    • Re:Another Option (Score:4, Informative)

      by FleaPlus ( 6935 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @05:50PM (#11567475) Journal
      Here's my recently-rejected slashdot submission on this, which has more info:

      Hubble Origins Probe: replace instead of repair?

      An international team led by Johns Hopkins University astronomers have proposed an alternative [spaceref.com] to sending a robotic or manned repair mission to the ailing Hubble Space Telescope [wikipedia.org]. Their proposal is to build a new Hubble Origins Probe [jhu.edu], reusing the Hubble design but using lighter and more cost-effective technologies. The probe would include instruments currently waiting to be installed on Hubble, as well as a Japanese-built imager which 'will allow scientists to map the heavens more than 20 times faster than even a refurbished Hubble Space Telescope could.' It would take an estimated 65 months and $1 billion to build, approximately the same cost as a robotic service mission.
  • It always seems that whenever something needs to be maintained, suddenly, congress is all scared to give them money. Like they never expected a 15yr old telescope dealing with the harshness of space would need lots of money to keep it going. The problem is, they make the initial investment saying "Oh, this will be great", but as soon as it becomes less than popular, they drop support, and thus waste billions of dollars worth of equipment and achievements, just so in the public eye they aren't wasting money. The problem is, the public doesn't realize they are wasting money by NOT spending the money for it. All I can say is "people are dumb" (well, on average, at any rate)
  • robotic repair crew? (Score:4, Informative)

    by chris09876 ( 643289 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:46PM (#11565411)
    That $2 billion price tag they mentioned was the cost of a robotic repair crew. $2 billion is a lot of money... it's hard to imagine all the R&D and other work that must go into a project like this.
    • That $2 billion price tag they mentioned was the cost of a robotic repair crew.

      The article mentions that they don't want to risk stranding astronauts at Hubble since there's no haven there to rescue them if something should go wrong. So they *have* to use robots.

      I'd fly up there and do the repairs for $1M regardless of the risks. Ok, maybe I'd ask for $50M since there's so much money floating around... but really, I'm sure if NASA offered $1M and training, they'd have thousands of volunteers regardles
      • by alienw ( 585907 )
        It's not the risk to the astronauts, it's the risk to NASA (as in, bad publicity). I mean, come on -- being an astronaut is safer than many other occupations (like a firefighter, or a soldier), even with the occasional failure once in a while. The reason NASA doesn't want to do it is that another failure would completely ruin them, not because they are concerned about the astronauts. Shit hitting the fan is a powerful force.
  • Let it go. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by jasoncc ( 754385 )
    Is this thing just an out-dated, broken down piece of crap that people just can't let go of because of sentimentality?

    I have a 15 year old car that I'm rather fond of due to all the good times I've been through with it, but when the next major repair becomes necessary, it's going to the dump.
    • I have a 15 year old car that I'm rather fond of due to all the good times I've been through with it, but when the next major repair becomes necessary, it's going to the dump.

      Of course, you might feel differently if your 15-year old car was the only car in the world. Or if dropping it at the dump was still going to cost you about half the repair price.
    • Re:Let it go. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by hildaur ( 86126 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:10PM (#11565689) Homepage
      The competition for use of the HST is still fierce, and for good reason.

      The problem is that it still offers capabilities that nothing else can replicate, or will for some considerable period of time.

      Yes, there are other telescopes that can do better than HST for some tasks, but there are still many tasks for which the HST is the best there is. Even if we consider planned future telescopes, they are all optimized for different things. The Webb telescope, for example, is optomized for infrared observations.

      Yes, we should be able to build someting with the capabilities of the Hubble much more cheaply now, but nobody actually has funding to do such a thing, and I suspect the chances of such a project being funded are worse that a repair (even if the repair is more expensive).

      If your 15 year old car were the only car ever built with the features you wanted, and nobody was willing to build another one, you might approach a major repair differently.

      -Hil
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:46PM (#11565418)
    ...of the ISS. Is that money pit doing anything for science but falling apart?
  • New Telescope? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TrevorB ( 57780 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:47PM (#11565427) Homepage
    I'm assuming that a new telescope can be developed and deployed for the same cost as a repair mission, and that the issue is the 5-7 year delay time from concept to launch?

    Maybe it's time to bite the bullet, be without data for a few years, and plan for something grander for the next decade.

    Why not look at developing a fleet of Hubbles, each with perhaps a 2 year lifespan, and just keep launching them as the others break down? Or better yet, launch a number at the same time. Hubble often seems very busy, I'm sure people would crave the opportunity to collect even more data?

    Of course, Hubble nostalgia is the one thing keeping funding going. Politically, you can continue to argue for Hubble repair, but not for the construction of new telescopes, even if they cost the same thing. The program would be never be approved or scrapped soon after the design phase.
    • Re:New Telescope? (Score:2, Interesting)

      by mallyone ( 541741 )
      What exactly cost this much to repair. Wouldn't it be cheaper to hitch a ride with the Russian space agency a la Denis Tito. He paid what, 10Million for a ride, throw in some coin for spare parts and your still way under 1-2 Billion (but out of my price range). m
      • Tito paid twenty million for a ride on a Soyuz. I'm not sure if a Soyuz could even get into the orbit occupied by the HST, but in any case, the Soyuz does not have the capacity (little cargo room, no robot arm, etc) to effect HST repairs.
      • Re:New Telescope? (Score:3, Informative)

        by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

        What exactly cost this much to repair. Wouldn't it be cheaper to hitch a ride with the Russian space agency a la Denis Tito.

        Given that the Soyuz can't reach Hubble's orbit (in niether altitude or inclination)... No amount of money paid to them will get you there.

        throw in some coin for spare parts

        It doesn't matter how much or how little you spend for spares in this scheme.. Even if the Soyuz could reach Hubble (it can't) the cargo capacity of the capsule is about the same as your average tricycle. No

    • Why not look at developing a fleet of Hubbles, each with perhaps a 2 year lifespan, and just keep launching them as the others break down?

      If my USB cable were a tad longer, I'd be happy to send my webcam into orbit!
    • Re:New Telescope? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Migraineman ( 632203 )
      I like the "fleet of Hubbles" idea. Many folks argue that designing a replacement will take 5-7 years ... okay, how long will building an exact replica take? Oh, the establishment players don't really want to answer that one, do they? There's not enough R&D funding to justify it. I personally think they should build a second unit with the available spares and chuck it into orbit. Let Hubble I keep functioning as long as it can. Put a second resource up in a slightly different orbit. Do more scien
  • by Anonymous Coward
    But the telescope needs servicing to continue working...

    Don't forget to check the oil and rotate the tires while you are up there

  • by webword ( 82711 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:47PM (#11565431) Homepage
    "Both scientists and legislators praised the orbiting observatory for the many contributions it had made to science since it was launched in 1990."

    I prefer to praise the humans who built Hubble versus Hubble itself. That damn Hubble gets all the m4d pr0pz.
  • by Faust7 ( 314817 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:48PM (#11565438) Homepage
    ...are "Why are these costs so prohibitively high?" and "What can be done to correct this?"
  • by kevinx ( 790831 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:49PM (#11565452)
    now that the unsuspecting people think that hubble is just floating garbage, it's true purpose can be utilized; a High powered Super Laser.
  • One Idea: (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Sophrosyne ( 630428 )
    Open it up to the rest of the world, have other countries, people, and institutions fund it and then split up their usage time depending on the amount they donate.
  • by panurge ( 573432 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @02:51PM (#11565481)
    When the Wall came down, all the old cars in West Germany started to make their way to the East. Why not sell the Hubble to the Chinese or the Indians so they can get it serviced, and do some work with it, while the US gets a new one?

    I suspect the Chinese could get it fixed for a lot less than $1 billion. It's called trickle down economics, I think.

  • Take 'er down (Score:2, Insightful)

    Repairing the Hubble might be prohibitively expensive, but a simpler retrieval mission shouldn't cost much more than your average shuttle mission. That thing belongs in the Smithsonian once it's out of service, not vaporized in reentry.
    • With all the taboo associated with the Shuttle Program, do you really thing that Nasa/Congress could send another shuttle+team up there with the sole purpose of retrieving the Hubble? I agree that something that has contributed as much as the Hubble has should be preserved, but I just don't see that Congress/Nasa coming up with a way to do this in time and with our current program. Maybe we could get Virgin Galactic to do it for us, instead?
    • Shuttle missions ain't cheap. A deorbiting burn is essentially free. The difference is that the latter gives you charred remains at the bottom of the ocean. IMHO, save the money to launch its replacement. The US gummint has spread itself too thin financially already.
    • Re:Take 'er down (Score:3, Informative)

      by FreeUser ( 11483 )
      Repairing the Hubble might be prohibitively expensive, but a simpler retrieval mission shouldn't cost much more than your average shuttle mission. That thing belongs in the Smithsonian once it's out of service, not vaporized in reentry.

      The wheels of the space shuttle would collapse upon touchdown from the weight of the Hubble. It was never designed to land with cargo still in the hold.
      • Re:Take 'er down (Score:4, Informative)

        by orac2 ( 88688 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:30PM (#11565933)
        The wheels of the space shuttle would collapse upon touchdown from the weight of the Hubble.

        Nope: NASA originally intended to recover the HST and stick it in the Smithsonian, as the parent suggested, see the second to last paragraph in this story [cnn.com], for example.

        The retrieval mission was cancelled for various reasons, but collapsing wheels wasn't one of them.

        It was never designed to land with cargo still in the hold.

        The shuttle has landed with cargo still in the hold numerous times, albeit not anything that massed as much as the HST. Indeed, so called the shuttle's large 'downmass' capability was one of its big sells, and is still something unique to it.
    • Re:Take 'er down (Score:4, Informative)

      by Blakey Rat ( 99501 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @04:27PM (#11566565)
      The only Space Shuttle with a cargo bay large enough to hold Hubble was Columbia. No longer an option.

      To use any of the other shuttles would require major, major structural modifications to them-- probably more expensive than just repairing it and leaving them there. And, as another poster pointed out, shuttles aren't designed to land with cargo, so more modification would be needed to bulk up the landing gear and drag chutes.
  • Why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by kaustik ( 574490 )
    I know this is going to start a huge flame war, but seriously - what good has the space program done for mankind? Anything other than cure our lust for knowledge of the unknown?
    • Well, there's major advances in computing, materials technology, fabrication and manufacturing techniques, not to mention vast increases in human knowledge.
    • >Anything other than cure our lust for knowledge of the unknown?

      the difference is, some will not think of those things in terms of "anything other than..."

      what "other" things are you thinking it should have accomplished or we should accomplish in general? do you think "curing the lust for knowledge of the unknown" is not worthy enough on its own? if so, could you tell me why you think not?

      • I think it is more than enough reason. I'd just like to see how people feel about the space program. There has been a lot of controversy as to whether or not it is worth the money we put into it.
    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by orac2 ( 88688 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:09PM (#11565675)
      what good has the space program done for mankind? Anything other than .... knowledge?

      *sigh* This question comes up every time space exploration comes up, and everytime it's answered. Really, there should be FAQ's for /. topics linked to every article, so every time someone posts a question asked and answered ad nausem, we can just point them to it.

      Discounting scientific knowledge, we have, briefly and non-comprehensively:

      1) Satellite monitoring, navigation and communications technology.

      2) Mass produced integrated circuits.

      3) Major contributions to the environmental movement.

      4) Advanced management techniques.
  • The Hubble is supposed to end service around 2010. The James Webb Space Telescope is slated for an August 2011 launch. We just need to ensure it launches both successfully and on time.

    What complicates the question are the breathtaking advances in Earth-based astronomy since the Hubble was conceived. During the 1970s when Hubble was designed, the conventional wisdom was that ground based telescopes would never have the resolution of space telescopes because the atmosphere seeing limited the resolution of g
  • let me just state that it's hard to put a price tag on "functioning" status. what's working today and will continue to work longer with high probability given proper care is almost infinitely more valuable than something that's being planned and may (or may not) work in the future.
  • Accounting? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mosb1000 ( 710161 ) <mosb1000@mac.com> on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:01PM (#11565588)
    "Representative Bart Gordon of Tennessee, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said the NASA estimate for a shuttle mission needed clarification. In answer to committee budget questions in 2002, Mr. O'Keefe wrote that the cost of the shuttle mission was included in the long-term budget of the space flight office, not the science budget.

    Dr. Steven Beckwith, director of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, said previous shuttle missions to the telescope were charged in the $300 million to $400 million range, which was acceptable to scientists. If the cost suddenly went above $1 billion, Dr. Beckwith said, he would have to reconsider his strong support for a service mission."

    So the Hubbell costs $300 million to service when you don't add the cost of the shuttle flight? I can't believe that NASA ever tracked the cost of their programs this way. Does it make any sense not to include the cost of the shuttle flight in the Science budget if that is the only purpose for the shuttle flight?
  • Let them outsource the work to the Russians. Heck, they can do everything that we Americans, can at one-third the cost. In fact, they can even do more like remotely controlling multiple-head [nuclear] missiles with pin point accuracy, all at costs our CTOs, CFOs and CEOs do not want to hear.

    Afterall, outsourcing is the lingua franca in Washington these days. Now, before I get modded, these are facts.

  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:05PM (#11565637) Homepage Journal
    Because of the concerns for the crew safety.

    If we allow for a 0.5% probability of the loss of austronauts, the costs would drop dramatically. For example, they don't want to send the mission without another shuttle on "stand-by", because, if something is wrong, this mission will not be able to repair itself (unlike those, that are sent to ISS).

    If lives can be and are lost for a good cause in Afghanistan, Iraq, in fighting domestic crime, and in firefighting, I say, we are overly protective of the space crews.

  • outsource (Score:3, Funny)

    by bigbadbuccidaddy ( 160676 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:08PM (#11565668)
    duh, just outsource it to india.
  • I have written an informative article about Hubble on my site [wikinerds.org].
  • by CoccaNut ( 855912 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:14PM (#11565726)
    Costs Associated With Servicing Hubble:
    • Shuttle Launch: $400-500 million
    • Additional Hardware to meet CAIB requirements for non-ISS shuttle flights: $80-100 million
    • Actual hardware and training to execute the mission: $300-400 million
    • Potential Cost of Losing an Orbiter in an Accident: $2.2 billion
    • Potential Cost of Losing Seven Lives in an Accident: Priceless (can you put a price on life?)
    If this were a systems administration project like many of us geeks typically work on, we wouldn't be trying to sell the boss on a hugely expensive upgrade when we know damn well that we're going to be rolling out a completely new, cheaper, better system within the next couple of years. Sentiment aside, it just doesn't make sense to spend national resources and risk lives when we can devote our energies (and dollars) toward further improving ground-based telescopes and getting JWST aloft. Let Hubble give us the best it's got during its last few years, and then bury it in a blaze of literal glory as it burns up in the atmosphere.
  • by Baldrson ( 78598 ) * on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:18PM (#11565779) Homepage Journal
    The solution is synthesis of a sky-time market from scientist demand. Scientist demand should derive money provided by their funding source to purchase required sky-time. If there is sufficient market demand for Hubble sky-time it will be profitable to repair. Otherwise it should be sold for scrap/ditched.
  • by rleibman ( 622895 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:56PM (#11566202) Homepage
    Maybe I'm stating the obvious, but most options I've seen ask to replace Hubble with something newly designed. Why this seems good, and if we had the money I could see it, I haven't heard the alternative:
    Why not replace it with a brand new hubble, using the design of the original? I.e. reduce the costs of design, research and development by reusing what we already know works, of course use some obvious improvements (including avoiding the optics errors), but only replace something in the design if a better, proven, easy-to-upgrade or off-the-shelf alternative has been developed since Hubble was first designed/deployed.
  • by sjonke ( 457707 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @03:56PM (#11566216) Journal
    Aside from life-extension repairs, the mission would also replace two instruments (one not really an instrument) with two brand new instruments providing greatly increased capability. Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) will replace Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), and Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS), will replace the no longer needed corrective optics of COSTAR (the corrective optics are now incorporated into the individual instruments). To call this strictly a repair missing is a wild understatement.
  • by scdeimos ( 632778 ) on Thursday February 03, 2005 @06:34PM (#11567853)

    For those wishing to avoid NYT's soul-eating registration, try:
    Congress Debates Saving Hubble [cbsnews.com]

Reality must take precedence over public relations, for Mother Nature cannot be fooled. -- R.P. Feynman

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