http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/hubble_public_040125.html

The operators of the Hubble Space Telescope are being bombarded by
suggestions from the public on how to save the craft -- which NASA has
decided not to service anymore -- and say they are considering all
offers.
Of the hundreds of e-mails, about a quarter ask, "Why can't the
Russians help?"

Others suggest towing it to the space station for repairs, said Bruce
Margon, associate director for science at the Space Telescope Science
Institute, which operates Hubble for NASA.

"They are enormously concerned, they are perplexed, they are angry,"
Margon said. "They ask 'What percentage of the NASA budget is this?'
And we tell them it's about 1 percent."

The Baltimore-based institute will set up a Web site to take
suggestions from the public, he said.

The suggestions started arriving after NASA said last week it won't
send the space shuttle in 2006 to service the Hubble, a mission
considered essential to enable the orbiting telescope to continue
operating. The Hubble has revolutionized the study of astronomy with
its striking images of the universe.

Instead, NASA will focus on President Bush's plans to send humans to
the moon and Mars. Virtually all remaining missions of the shuttle,
which also is being phased out, will be used to complete construction
of the International Space Station.

As for the suggestions received so far for saving the Hubble
telescope, Margon said the Russians might be able to help, but towing
the Hubble to the space station is impractical because the two are in
very different orbits.

The space station is in a lower orbit, and takes a much different path
around the Earth. If the Hubble could be moved into that orbit, it is
not clear whether the space telescope could work because of drag from
the small amount of the Earth's atmosphere present at that altitude,
he said.

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., the ranking minority member of the
Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees NASA's budget, said
in a letter to NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe on Wednesday that she
was shocked by the decision given the Hubble's extraordinary
contributions to science.

"I ask you to reconsider your decision and appoint an independent
panel of outside experts to fully review and assess all of the issues
surrounding another Hubble servicing mission," Mikulski said.

The 2006 mission was to be the fifth and final mission to the space
telescope before its planned retirement in 2010. The Hubble will
eventually fall out of orbit and crash to Earth, probably in 2011 or
2012.

"We feel that we should consider every conceivable idea to get back
the last four to six years of discovery that Hubble was on the brink
of making," Margon said.

NASA does eventually plan one final mission to Hubble, an as yet
undesigned, unmanned rocket that will guide the space telescope back
to Earth for a fiery crash into the Pacific. NASA originally planned
to use the shuttle to retrieve Hubble and display it at the
Smithsonian.

"That's part of the heartbreak, something is going to have to visit
Hubble anyway," Margon said.




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If You Love Hubble And You Know It Clap Your Hands Maru

rob


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