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RESCUING HUBBLE

The MIT Aeronautics and Astronautics Department 2013 Lester D. Gardner 
Lecture/Symposium

To commemorate the 20th anniversary of STS 61, the first Hubble Space Telescope 
Servicing Mission, MIT’s Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics’ 2013 
Lester D. Gardner Lecture will be “Rescuing Hubble,” a daylong symposium on 
Wednesday, November 13, 2013. Participants will include five of the STS 61 
Shuttle Endeavour crew, the lead flight director, the chief training 
supervisor, the former head of NASA space flight operations, the optical 
engineers who developed the optical fixes for Hubble, astronomers involved with 
the HST repair, and NASA's lead servicing expert. In addition to discussions of 
the STS 61 mission specifics, the symposium will look at the future of robotic 
and human space servicing missions. The symposium will be held in MIT’s Bartos 
Theater (E15-070) and is open to the public.

Lester D. Gardner Lectures are made possible by a bequest of the late Major 
Lester D. Gardner to sponsor annual presentations on aerospace history.

The Hubble Space Telescope took longer from start to launch and cost more than 
any previous NASA spacecraft. Deployed in April 1990, its mission was to 
explore and answer some of astronomy’s most intriguing questions, including 
those of the origin and evolution of the universe. Yet within weeks of 
attaining orbit a stunning realization emerged: a manufacturing defect in the 
main mirror resulted in images of such poor quality the massive project was in 
danger of utter failure.

The landmark December 2-13, 1993 rescue mission, STS 61, was the most complex 
and challenging Space Shuttle mission that had ever been flown. Carrying out an 
unprecedented five space walks, the mission reversed Hubble’s fate, and in 
ensuing years the telescope has provided us with a stunning array of images and 
revelations about our universe more astounding than even the most imaginative 
astronomers, astrophysicists, and stargazers thought possible. In addition, the 
mission set the stage for future complex on-orbit extra-vehicular challenges 
including the construction and maintenance of the International Space Station.

Organizers: Jeff Hoffman, David Mindell, MIT Aero/Astro Dept.

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