Astronauts say goodbye to Hubble for good

May 19, 2009  1:21 PM (ET)

By MARCIA DUNN
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20090519/D989EL4O0.html


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Atlantis' astronauts gingerly dropped the 
Hubble Space Telescope overboard Tuesday, sending the restored 
observatory off on a new voyage of discovery and bidding it farewell on 
behalf of the planet.

Hubble - considered better than new following five days of repairs and 
upgrades - will never be seen up close by humans again. This was NASA's 
last service call.

The shuttle and telescope had just crossed the Atlantic, and were 
soaring 350 miles above the coast of northwestern Africa, when astronaut 
Megan McArthur used a robot arm to release the snares gripping Hubble. 
Then the shuttle slowly backed away.

"Hubble has been released," reported commander Scott Altman. "It's 
safely back on its journey of exploration as we begin steps to conclude 
ours. Looking back on this mission, it's been an incredible journey for 
us as well."

Mission Control radioed congratulations: "It's wonderful to see Hubble, 
the most famous scientific instrument of all time, newly upgraded and 
ready for action thanks to you."

With Hubble flying on its own again, the seven astronauts looked ahead 
to Friday's planned landing. But first they had to inspect their ship 
one last time to make sure it had not suffered any serious damage from 
space junk. The wing and nose survey, similar to one performed last week 
to check for launch damage, got under way early Tuesday afternoon.

The telescope's unusually high orbit had placed the shuttle and its crew 
at increased risk and, because of the lack of a refuge, prompted NASA to 
keep a rescue ship on standby until the end of the 11-day flight. To 
improve their safety, the astronauts dropped Atlantis into an egg-shaped 
orbit that is, much of the time, lower than the telescope's junk-ridden 
orbit.

During five consecutive days of spacewalks loaded with drama, Atlantis' 
crew labored tirelessly on the 19-year-old observatory. Four men working 
in teams of two gave the telescope two new high-powered science 
instruments and a suite of other up-to-date equipment, and fixed two 
broken instruments, something never before attempted in orbit.

The astronauts persevered, despite stuck bolts, ill-fitting gyroscopes 
and flyaway shreds of insulation. Two of them were ready to jump into 
spacewalking action one last time if the telescope's aperture door had 
not opened Tuesday morning or some other last-minute problem cropped up. 
None did.

NASA said the astronauts' extraordinary effort not only fixed Hubble, 
but should give the iconic telescope another five to 10 years and allow 
it to reveal even more mysteries of the cosmos.

"This morning, you watch us from the pinnacle of human existence, 
representing the pinnacle of our craft, and leaving Hubble at the apex 
of its scientific power," Hubble program officials said in a message to 
the crew.

"Hubble is now ready to resume its role as humankind's most powerful 
eyes on the universe."

The Hubble team hopes to resume celestial observations by the end of 
summer, following an intensive series of tests.

As for the space telescope's future, there will be no more visits. 
Sometime after 2020, NASA will send a robotic craft to steer it back 
into the atmosphere and a watery grave. The spacewalkers installed a 
docking ring for just that purpose.

That day, however, was far from the astronauts' minds as they reflected 
on their success.

"It's a little bittersweet that it's over," telescope repairman Michael 
Massimino said late Monday after the final spacewalk.

"The big drama's coming," teased pilot Gregory Johnson. "Landing, baby."

---

On the Net:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html

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

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