One Last Trip to Open Hubble's Eyes Even Wider

By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer

Monday, July 7, 2008; A05

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/06/AR2008070601550_pf.html


By the end of the year, the world's greatest telescope should be able to 
see deeper into space and further back in time than ever. If all goes as 
planned, it will be able to detect events closer to the big bang, explore 
the "cosmic web" of galaxies and intergalactic gas that make up the 
large-scale structure of the universe, and reveal much more about how and 
when distant stars and planets were formed.

NASA scientists, engineers and astronauts are finalizing plans to fly the 
space shuttle this fall on a mission to the Hubble Space Telescope to 
repair and upgrade the orbiting observatory that revolutionized astronomy. 
The long-delayed servicing mission will be the last for the Hubble, NASA 
says, but it will allow the telescope to perform at its highest level ever 
for the remaining five or six years of its operating life.

"This will be the first time ever that instrument box is full," said Hubble 
senior scientist David Leckrone last week. "We will have the most powerful 
imaging capability on Hubble ever, and possibly anywhere."

It is hard to overstate the importance of the Hubble and its insights into 
the evolution of the universe, the presence of mysterious dark matter and 
dark energy, and the existence of hundreds (and probably many more) of 
planets orbiting distant stars.

In a briefing at the Goddard Space Flight Center, scientists said that 
observations by the telescope have resulted in an average of 12 published 
discoveries a week for years, and that almost 4,400 principal and 
co-investigators have produced articles based on its data.

"This is surely the most productive telescope in history," said Charles 
Mattias "Matt" Mountain, director of the Space Telescope Science Institute 
on the Johns Hopkins University campus in Baltimore.

It also has the most remarkable history. The upcoming mission, scheduled 
for early October, will be the fifth to the Hubble, which orbits almost 350 
miles above Earth. Launched with great fanfare in 1990 after long delays, 
the more than $3 billion instrument (funded by NASA but with contributions 
from the European Space Agency) initially did not work because of a hugely 
embarrassing mistake in shaping its 2.4-meter mirror.

But the Hubble's developers and managers went from goats to heroes in 1993 
when the first-ever repair mission in orbit succeeded in installing 
corrective optics that allowed the telescope to begin sending back 
spectacular and often awe-inspiring images. Subsequent space shuttle 
missions steadily upgraded the observatory and its capabilities, and the 
Hubble gradually achieved iconic status.

Time and the harsh environment of space take a constant toll, however, and 
NASA began planning one final upgrade -- until the 2003 destruction of the 
space shuttle Columbia. Heightened safety concerns led NASA to cancel the 
mission, but a public outcry ensued.

Officials then proposed sending a robotic mission to repair the telescope, 
but several years of work led to a finding that it could not do the job. 
Finally, in 2006, newly appointed NASA Administrator Michael Griffin 
reversed the earlier decision and gave the go-ahead to the final repair 
mission.

This last servicing will also deliver two new instruments -- the Cosmic 
Origins Spectrograph (which will explore the cosmic web in extreme 
ultraviolet frequencies) and the Wide Field Camera 3 (which will allow the 
telescope to "see" across the light spectrum from ultraviolet to optical 
and infrared). Over the course of five strenuous spacewalks, astronauts 
will also work to repair cameras and equipment that have degraded or 
failed, including the Advanced Camera for Surveys, which produced many of 
the Hubble's most dramatic images.

The two instruments -- weighing a total of 11 tons -- are now in a massive 
"clean room" at Goddard's Greenbelt campus, where engineers and technicians 
are conducting final tests and preparing to ship them to the Kennedy Space 
Center to be loaded onto the space shuttle Atlantis.

Last Monday, the four astronauts who will do the repairs -- including John 
Grunsfeld, who repaired the Hubble twice before, and Michael Massimino, who 
will be returning for his second mission -- joined the Goddard staff in 
head-to-toe white protective suits and booties required for the clean room 
to examine the tools they will use to do their work in space.

At Goddard, the new instruments have been exposed to intense vibration, 
extreme cold and heat and crushingly loud noises to make sure they can 
withstand the launch and the rigors of space. With the shuttles scheduled 
to be retired in 2010 and the schedule of flights to the international 
space station already very tight, the $900 million mission will almost 
certainly be the last to the Hubble.

Assuming the mission goes off as planned, the first new Hubble data and 
images are expected by early next year. Edward J. Weiler, who was the 
Hubble's first chief scientist and is now NASA's associate administrator of 
the Science Missions Directorate, said experience has taught him to be 
humble about predicting what the Hubble or any other new telescope will 
find. The major discoveries, he said, are often the ones that overthrow 
earlier assumptions and understandings.

Having been connected with the Hubble from its conception in the late 1970s 
to its 1990 launch, from its time as a multi-billion-dollar white elephant 
and national joke to its later repair and triumph, Weiler sees the Hubble 
as the ultimate "comeback kid."

"The telescope has given us spectacular science and images you can find 
hung up in art galleries, but I think Americans have such strong feelings 
about the Hubble because of its history," he said. "Our team and the 
instrument itself overcame enormous obstacles, but then delivered something 
that I think shows the best of America. One hundred years from now, people 
will remember Hubble and still be writing about what it did."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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