‘Experts’ say Hubble Space Telescope ‘beyond repair’, NASA Says Not

The Hubble telescope may be ‘beyond repair’ and this ‘could be the end of its story’, experts have said, although NASA insists it still has multiple options to try and fix it almost three weeks after it went offline.

The US space agency has dismissed fears the ageing observatory will never work again after a computer glitch caused it to shut down on June 13.

Hubble, a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), has been observing the Universe for more than 30 years.

Engineers have tried a range of measures to get it up and running again, including switching to a backup memory module, restarting the machine and turning on a backup version of the payload computer – but none of them solved the issue.

They found that the fault was in the Science Instrument Command and Data Handling (SI C&DH) unit, where the payload computer sits, and so are designing a way to safely switch to a backup unit, which is a ‘very risky process,‘ said NASA.

The ongoing issues have caused experts to speculate about the telescope’s future, with former NASA space shuttle pilot Clayton C Anderson saying he believes Hubble is ‘beyond repair‘.

FermiLab director and leading physicist Don Lincoln also said this ‘could be the end of Hubble’s story‘, but told CNN he couldn’t discount the ingenuity of NASA engineers.

NASA insists there is still life in the 31-year-old telescope, telling MailOnline it has ‘multiple redundancies on board and therefore options available to address this issue.

Astronomer Boris Gaensicke, University of Warwick professor, says the fact the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), which runs much of the Hubble operations, has called for proposals for time on the telescope in 2022 is a good sign.

I think STScI would know if Hubble is beyond repair, otherwise they would not ask people to now put in the effort to work out the details of how they will use Hubble from October 2022 onwards,‘ he told MailOnline.

However, the backup computer, which NASA hopes will solve the issue, hadn’t been powered on since it was installed in 2009 during Hubble’s last servicing mission.

Former space shuttle program manger, Wayne Hale, said there would be more options if the shuttle hadn’t been scrapped.

I think we could easily repair Hubble if there was a LEO spacecraft that had a robot arm to hold it, an airlock to support space walkers to repair it, and could hold a crew of about 6 to do the work. Oh yes, we used to have one of those. Reusable too.

NASA says it is taking additional steps to investigate the Hubble Space Telescope’s payload computer issue, and in parallel is preparing and testing procedures to switch on the backup hardware installed on the telescope in 2009.

The telescope itself and science instruments remain healthy and in a safe configuration,‘ according to an agency blog post.

The source of the computer problem lies in the Science Instrument Command and Data Handling (SI C&DH) unit, where the payload computer sits.

A few hardware pieces on the SI C&DH could be the culprit, but every single item has to be tested remotely one by one, which is why it is taking so much time.

Engineers are currently scrutinising the Command Unit/Science Data Formatter (CU/SDF), which sends and formats commands and data.

They are also examining a power regulator within the Power Control Unit, which is designed to ensure a steady voltage supply to the payload computer’s hardware.

NASA says if one of these is the likely cause they will complete a more complicated operation to switch to the backup units.

This procedure would be more complex and riskier than those the team executed last week, which involved switching to the backup payload computer hardware and memory modules,‘ according to the agency.

To switch to the backup CU/SDF or power regulator, several other hardware boxes on the spacecraft must also be switched due to the way they are connected.

The latest update from NASA on the state of operations for Hubble was published on June 30 and the agency says it is still working to solve the problem.

The agency said it needed a week to review and update all of the operations procedures involved in switching to backup hardware before testing the execution in a simulator.

This isn’t the first issue with Hubble, the telescope has had a number of problems requiring repair or hardware backup since it was first launched in 1990.

The team performed a similar switch in 2008, which allowed Hubble to continue normal science operations after a CU/SDF module failed,‘ NASA said. “A servicing mission in 2009 then replaced the entire SI C&DH unit, including the faulty CU/SDF module, with the SI C&DH unit currently in use.’

Since that servicing mission, Hubble has taken more than 600,000 additional observations to exceed 1.5 million during its lifetime.

Those observations continue to change our understanding of the universe.

It’s been definitely been one of the most important instruments astronomers have ever had,‘ Professor Gaensicke from Warwick University told MailOnline.

Because Hubble is in space, so not affected by the blurry Earth atmosphere, it can take super-sharp pictures, which reveal fine structures otherwise invisible. And those pictures are of stunning beauty, too, so Hubble is almost certainly the best-known telescope among the wider community, and many, many people have been admiring the amazing pictures Hubble took.

It has contributed to some of the most significant discoveries of our cosmos, including the accelerating expansion of the universe, the evolution of galaxies over time, and the first atmospheric studies of planets beyond our solar system.

Leading physicist and director of FermiLab, Don Lincoln told CNN that it was ‘too soon to accept the demise of the Hubble Space Telescope‘.

He said in an article for the broadcaster that the ‘telescope’s operational staff are both talented and clever,‘ but that it ‘could be the end of Hubble’s story‘.

It is a story that has forever changed our understanding of the universe, according to Professor Gaensicke, and through more than just taking pretty pictures.

It has a range of instruments, so you can think of it as a toolbox, and astronomers keep developing better ways to use the tools in that box, for example, to study the composition of the atmospheres of planets hundreds of light years away. We didn’t even know those planets exist when Hubble was built, so this is a good illustration how a 30-year old facility keeps being at the absolute forefront of astronomy.

Affelia Wibisono, from the UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory, said Hubble was one of the most successful space missions ever launched.

It has revolutionised our understanding of the Universe – from discovering new moons around Pluto, to taking the first visual image of a planet orbiting a star that is not the Sun,‘ the PhD student said.

It has also helped us make a 3D map of dark matter, and discover that every galaxy has a black hole at its heart.

Hubble has made astronomers rewrite textbooks. ‘Without the Hubble Space Telescope, it would be much more difficult for me to do my work in studying Jupiter’s northern and southern lights,‘ Wibisono added.

NASA is ‘confident‘ it can get Hubble back up and running, adding that all on board observation equipment is in ‘safe mode‘ and operating as expected.

NASA plans to continue working on the problems with Hubble, in the hope of once again extending the life of this telescope now in its third decade.

When Hubble launched from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on the space shuttle discovery in April 1990, the agency said it had an expected lifespan of a decade.

It is named after famed astronomer Edwin Hubble who was born in Missouri in 1889 and discovered that the universe is expanding and the rate it is doing so.

This is something the telescope that carries his name has been able to confirm, again and again, as well as show some of the earliest galaxies.

The telescope has been essential in expanding our understanding of the universe, with millions of observations resulting in tens of thousands of scientific papers.

It orbits Earth at a speed of about 17,000mph (27,300kph) in low Earth orbit at about 340 miles in altitude, slightly higher than the International Space Station.

Hubble has the pointing accuracy of .007 arc seconds, which is like being able to shine a laser beam focused on the Queen’s head on a coin 200 miles (320km) away.

It launched during the space shuttle-era of NASA, where astronauts could go on a spacewalk and repair any issues with the telescope.

This allowed the space agency to extend its life, from the initial ten years to reach 31 years this year.

Between 1993 and 2009, astronauts visited Hubble five times to replace limited-life items such as batteries, gyroscopes and electronic boxes, and to install state-of-the-art science instruments.

Each time astronauts visited Hubble, they left it a more capable, more productive observatory that could be managed from the ground.

When asked if he thinks this is the end of Hubble, Professor Peter Wheatley from the University of Warwick Department of Physics said he ‘certainly hopes not.

Especially because many of us at Warwick have observations scheduled to be carried out with Hubble,‘ he told MailOnline.

‘It is clear, however, that Hubble is beginning to show its age, and we do need to be prepared for that fact that it won’t go on forever. That is going to be a painful shock, because for most of us Hubble has been operating throughout our careers and we have come to take it granted. While other space telescopes have come and gone, Hubble has been a constant presence.

See more here: dailymail.co.uk

Header image: Hindustan Times

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Comments (1)

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    Andrew Pilkington

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    So, just hire another Artist, to paint NASA’s imaginary Landscapes, it’ll be ok, most people would never think of asking any questions, so NASA’s extravagant budget can be inflated and the Tax Payer’s will love it, as always 😛

    There’s plenty of spare Boeing 747’s knocking about, thanks to the psychopaths behind this Covid Scam, should it just be a matter of a few nuts and bolts, or even a Retro-fit?
    Personally, I’d consider something on the lines of an Airbus A380, seeing as it’s a matter of Space? lol
    Or, seeing as everything in the Fake Climate Agenda is all about going “Green”, to screw Society into the ground?
    How about a Glider and a Nikon P1000? The Luminaries look far better when Honesty is added in to the equation. But that’s the one things NASA (and the Daily Fail) seem to be incapable of giving us. But that’s the way the Cookie crumbles I suppose.

    Just give NASA extra Tax Payers money and be done with it. Afterall, British Rail’s HST’s were built in 1976 and they are Still the best trains running. At least, what’s left of them.
    So, there’s life in the ol’ Camera yet, no doubt. Get a 3 year old Child to have a look, they can fix Anything to do with Computers 🙂

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