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Science

Experts Recommend Keeping Hubble Operational 217

foolishtook writes " The New York Times is reporting that a panel of experts is recommending NASA to keep the Hubble Space Telescope operating past 2010 when its replacement, the James Webb Space Telescope, is currently slated for launch. NASA had stated that it wanted to bring the Hubble down in 2006 to make room in its budget for the Webb, but astronomers said that it still has a viable future and the launch date for the Webb is likely to be delayed."
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Experts Recommend Keeping Hubble Operational

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  • More info (Score:5, Informative)

    by mjmalone ( 677326 ) * on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:26PM (#6707370) Homepage
    I heard a piece on NPR about this yesterday. They said that there were three options, one was to send two more maned space missions to the hubble for repares and to attach a propulsion system to the unit so that it can safely be brought back to earth in 2010. The second was to go along with the current plan, send one more maned mission, that will do some minor upgrades and bring hubble down in 2006. The third option is to not send any more maned missions, and develop a robotic device that could be sent up and would attach the propulsion system to the unit.

    NASA said that it was worried about sending more maned missions up to the hubble since it is in a different orbit than the space station and if the mission is botched the shuttle would not be able to reach the station in an emergency.
    • Re:More info (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Pharmboy ( 216950 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:30PM (#6707409) Journal
      NASA said that it was worried about sending more maned missions up to the hubble since it is in a different orbit than the space station and if the mission is botched the shuttle would not be able to reach the station in an emergency.

      With all due respect to the families, I am not so sure they know an emergency when they see it, literally.

      I would feel better if we did everything we could to keep it in space until a replacement is operational, and then after that as long as it is cost effective. Its kinda what my dad told me about my first car: "Put as little money in it as you can, and drive it until it blows up."
    • Re:More info (Score:4, Interesting)

      by iCat ( 690740 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:40PM (#6707477)
      One option is to send a rocket to boost HST into a much higher orbit. Effectively mothballed, it could be re-fitted or returned to Earth once a safer shuttle replacement is available. Of coarse this presupposes the shuttle replacement will have a cargo hold large enough to hold it. It would be cool to visit HST in your local science museum in years to come, though.
      • Re:More info (Score:2, Interesting)

        by FroMan ( 111520 )
        I don't know, but is landing the space shuttle with more weight a good idea?

        Sometimes the shuttle bay is filled with things when it comes down, but the hubble is quite a peice of metal. How does it compare to other things it has landed with.

        Ohyeah, IANARS (rocket scientist).
        • Re:More info (Score:3, Informative)

          by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

          I don't know, but is landing the space shuttle with more weight a good idea?

          Sometimes the shuttle bay is filled with things when it comes down, but the hubble is quite a peice of metal. How does it compare to other things it has landed with.

          Considering that Hubble was launched by the Shuttle [nasa.gov]... It's an iron clad rule of shuttle ops that it can land with what it launched with. (Otherwise it would not be able to abort [shuttlepresskit.com] or make an emergency de-orbit.) Some of the payloads that are intended to left in space

    • by yintercept ( 517362 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:47PM (#6707533) Homepage Journal
      I think NASA should stop sending maned missions to space. Yes, its fun watching manes flap in the wind at launch. It gives NASA the fun, excitement and anticipation of the horse races. But manes really don't help the mission at all and cause more friction than they are worth...Not to mention the cost of grooming and shampoo. Unmaned space exploration is a lot more efficient. So I say get out the scissors and cut the manes off.
    • Re:More info (Score:2, Interesting)

      by prgrmr ( 568806 )
      NASA said that it was worried about sending more maned missions up to the hubble since it is in a different orbit than the space station and if the mission is botched the shuttle would not be able to reach the station in an emergency.

      Hubble is 375 miles up; ISS is 240-ish. Wouldn't getting from Hubble to ISS just be a controlled reduction in orbital speed to dropped the altitude? Or, reading a bit between the lines, is the real issue that the shuttles don't have any purely manual thrusters that can be
      • Re:More info (Score:4, Informative)

        by Captain Nitpick ( 16515 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:17PM (#6707709)
        Hubble is 375 miles up; ISS is 240-ish. Wouldn't getting from Hubble to ISS just be a controlled reduction in orbital speed to dropped the altitude?

        No.

        Hubble and ISS have very different orbital inclinations (28.5 degrees for Hubble, 51.6 for ISS). Changing orbital inclination to this degree requires more fuel than an orbiting shuttle can carry. This has been discussed repeatedly on post-Columbia disaster articles.

    • attach a propulsion system to the unit so that it can safely be brought back to earth

      they're going to have to do more than that. way you described it, it would be bouncing back into the atmosphere on the end of a rocket pack.

      after all, there are cheaper ways to turn it into pretty lights in the sky...

      • Re:More info (Score:3, Interesting)

        by knobmaker ( 523595 )

        I almost certainly don't know what I'm talking about, but why couldn't NASA pay the Soviets to fire up a couple engineers and the necessary gear to maintain Hubble?

        Then the only orbital change would be the one that brings the Soviet vehicle back to Earth.

    • You may be reading some articles stating that the Webb is the replacement for Hubble, but it simply isn't true.

      Here is a quote from "Sky and Telescope":

      "Three issues lie at the heart of the debate.

      First, Hubble has unique capabilities for ultraviolet and visible-light astronomy that will not be replaced by any other planned mission for 10 to 20 years (Webb is designed mainly for infrared imaging and spectroscopy).

      Second, Webb hasn't yet moved much beyond the drawing board and may not be ready for launch until the middle of the next decade, leaving astronomers with no space telescope at all for several years if Hubble shuts down by 2010.

      And third, Hubble is more than just a telescope. "HST is widely recognized as an extraordinary scientific, educational, and inspirational national asset," wrote Garth Illingworth (University of California, Santa Cruz) and Michael Shull (University of Colorado). In other words, it is an icon."

      Read more at:

      http://skyandtelescope.com/news/article_1017_1.a sp

  • Experts Urge a Reprieve for the Hubble Space Telescope By DENNIS OVERBYE he Hubble Space Telescope, astronomy's vaunted time machine, was granted a conditional reprieve yesterday when an expert panel recommended that NASA consider sending a crew of astronauts at the end of the decade to extend its career, rather than dropping it out of orbit, as has been planned.

    But the committee said its recommendation should be carried out only if the science to be performed in those additional years was able to be
  • Paralax (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ocie ( 6659 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:27PM (#6707385) Homepage
    They should try to park the next one as far away from Hubble as possible. There might be some interesting things we could see with such a huge effective aperture.
    • Re:Paralax (Score:5, Interesting)

      by josquin00 ( 675292 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:32PM (#6707421)
      From Aviation Week: [aviationnow.com]

      Eight years from now, an Ariane 5 is expected to boost the 5,400-kg. (11,880-lb.) observatory toward the second Lagrangian point (L2), 1.5 million km. (930,000 mi.) beyond Earth's orbit

      That's a pretty good distance from the Hubble.

      • Re:Paralax (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Speare ( 84249 )
        Hm, is this the first "mission to L2"?

        We've long known about the Lagrangian points; they're natural pockets of orbital stability between two massive bodies, and there are at least five identified positions relative to the two bodies. There's even a popular filk to the tune of 'Home on the Range' about living in a Lagrangian satellite village; google for it if you're bored.

        But this is the first mention I've seen of anyone actually parking anything there.

        • Re:Paralax (Score:3, Informative)

          by kwan3217 ( 145249 )
          No, this is far from the first mission to the Earth-Sun lagrange points. I know of at least two sat at L1 (between Earth and Sun), SOHO, a solar obervatory, and Genesis, a solar wind collector. There is also at least one at L2 (opposite side of Earth from Sun), MAP, a cosmic background radiation mapper.

          All the stories about colonization of the lagrange points are the Earth-Moon points. I don't know if there have been any missions to these points, but that doesn't mean there hasn't been any.
        • This filk? (Score:3, Informative)

          This one [jamesoberg.com]?

          Oh, give me a locus where the gravitons focus
          Where the three-body problem is solved,
          Where the microwaves play down at three degrees K,
          And the cold virus never evolved.

          (chorus)

          We eat algea pie, our vacuum is high,
          Our ball bearings are perfectly round.
          Our horizon is curved, our warheads are MIRVed,
          And a kilogram weighs half a pound.

          (chorus)

          If we run out of space for our burgeoning race
          No more Lebensraum left for the Mensch
          When we're ready to start, we can take Mars apart,
          If we just find a big en
      • Re:Paralax (Score:3, Funny)

        by jeremyp ( 130771 )
        Ariane 5??

        It'll probably boost the observatory to an even distribution of small fragments over a 400 mile radius around the launch point on the Earth's surface.

        But, it'll be very pretty.
        • Re:Paralax (Score:2, Funny)

          by snake_dad ( 311844 )
          Ariane 5?? It'll probably boost the observatory to an even distribution of small fragments over a 400 mile radius around the launch point on the Earth's surface. But, it'll be very pretty.

          Like other space telescope launch vehicles themselves become an even distribution of small fragments all over Texas?

          • Re:Paralax (Score:3, Funny)

            by Bombcar ( 16057 )
            Like other space telescope launch vehicles themselves become an even distribution of small fragments all over Texas?

            But, like good capitalists, ours gets the damn thing up there first..... :)
    • Re:Paralax (Score:5, Interesting)

      by QuantumFTL ( 197300 ) * on Friday August 15, 2003 @05:01PM (#6707991)
      Disclaimer: I work for NASA, however I write software.

      They should try to park the next one as far away from Hubble as possible. There might be some interesting things we could see with such a huge effective aperture.

      Hmm... Not sure what exactly you mean by this. If you're talking simple parallax-based astrometry, the hubble c an already do this effectively by taking measurements of the same stars at different points in the Earth's revolution around Sol. This gives it an effective baseline of 2 A.U. No tandem satallite in earth orbit can possibly match that.

      Perhaps you're talking about aperture synthesis interferometry? This is what is used by things like the Very Large Array... it involves single combination to extract additional imaging information from the phase differences. While that is very cool, at optical wavelengths (like those that Hubble uses) it would require Formation Flying [nasa.gov] to well within a wavelength of visible light (certainly impossible with any technology we have today, let alone already on the Hubble). The Terrestrial Planet Finder [nasa.gov] mission is possibly using a formation flying architecture to do infrared nulling interferometry (a different type of interferometry that allows them to filter out light from a star to see nearby planets). At optical wavelengths, it'd be nearly impossible.

      Also don't forget that the larger your synthetic aperture, the more photons you need to collect to have a successful integration... This means that for very large baselines, (like the ones you suggest) you'd need *HUGE* telescopes looking for months on end.

      Perhaps you meant something different?

      Cheers,
      Justin
  • Sell it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by upplepop ( 684833 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:27PM (#6707388)
    Perhaps they should consider selling it to another party. I'm sure there are some companies or non-profit organizations who would be interested and have the resources to take it over.
    • Re:Sell it (Score:2, Insightful)

      by pascalb3 ( 514151 )
      I seriously doubt this as a viable alternative. NASA is a US government agency that develops leading-edge space technologies. I do not think they would want to turn over such a highly-sophisticated telescope to anyone else, especially non-US companies.
    • Re:Sell it (Score:3, Insightful)

      by imnoteddy ( 568836 )
      I'm sure there are some companies or non-profit organizations who would be interested and have the resources to take it over.

      How many companies or non-profit organizations have their own Space Shuttles?

    • I vote to donate it [the Hubble telescope] to either SETI or (for a more radical suggestion) MUFON. SETI could then direct the Hubble to view the star systems that "candidate" signals are detected from...
  • Hubble Rocks (Score:2, Interesting)

    by msheppard ( 150231 )
    I saw keep it running as long as possible, then send a shuttle up to bring it back to the Smithsonian.

    M@
    • Re:Hubble Rocks (Score:2, Informative)

      by cethiesus ( 164785 )
      I'll have to check, but I don't think the Shuttles are made to bring such large objects down from orbit. The re-entry procedures are run virtually entirely by a computer which has the Shuttle's weight programmed into it and the Hubble, if not very heavy, would throw off the balance of the Shuttle and make it harder for the computer to correct for deviations. (This is what they said happened to the Columbia, the flight characteristics of the Shuttle changed too quickly for the computer to compensate and furt
      • No, the hubble was designed with this in mind. When they had to fix the flawed mirror, there was talk of just bringing the whole thing back in the shuttle and fixing it here. It's doable.

        Also, aerodynamic changes due to the wings getting torn up are significantly different from a shift of center of gravity. The former wasn't even recognized in time, the latter would be planned months ahead of the mission.
    • Re:Hubble Rocks (Score:5, Informative)

      by afniv ( 10789 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:40PM (#6707478) Homepage
      The Hubble was designed (and originally planned) to be returned with a Shuttle. But due to the latest happenings, that's been canned. It's too bad, since there would be plenty of science and engineering learned from reviewing the affects the environement had on the materials of Hubble.
      • Then again if the Russians managed to fly their shuttle remotely, what would be stopping NASA from doing the same? Then you would only need to put the essential crew on board.
  • Hubble (Score:3, Funny)

    by flea69 ( 667238 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:29PM (#6707401)
    Hubble has taken some amazing pictures during its time in space..I for one am hopeful they keep it going, I am in constant need of the desktop wallpapers produced as a result of it.
  • blech (Score:4, Funny)

    by DiracFeynman ( 655294 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:29PM (#6707403) Journal
    I hope the images the new telescope (James Webb) acquires won't be as bad as the ones on it's website.
  • Hubble (Score:4, Insightful)

    by The Old Burke ( 679901 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:30PM (#6707408)
    Why don't hey ues the Hubble for satelite surveilance of the earth?
    I mean, the Hubble is very sophisticated an capable of aking excellent shots. If they had allocated a bit of the money from the Homeland dept. to the next Hubble (Webb) i'm sure they could have used Huble to take shots of Iran and North Korea.

    • Re:Hubble (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Tumbleweed ( 3706 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:40PM (#6707472)
      The Hubble is not designed to focus on anything even remotely that 'near'. It's not even designed to work to maximum effect on anything within the solar system, but it has been used to that purpose previously. But imaging the Earth? No way. Plus there are already numerous such satellites already in orbit that are designed to do that as their primary job. That would be a big waste.

      No, keeping the Hubble in orbit is a great idea, even after the new one goes up - the Hubble can still be used by other astronomers who can't get time on the new one.
      • Ants (Score:5, Funny)

        by The Ape With No Name ( 213531 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:57PM (#6707592) Homepage
        I am thinking Ants and a Magnifying Glass here.
      • Man, get with the conspiracy-theory program!

        Don't you know that the whole reason the Hubble's mirror was messed up to begin with is that it was "accidentally" switched with a duplicate mirror intended for a miltary version of the Hubble?

        The military one was focused for Earth-Orbit distances. After the mess up, they had to fix the military version before launching it on a later military Shuttle lanuch.

        That's my theory, and I'm sticking to it. q:]

        MadCow.
    • Too bright! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:44PM (#6707499)
      Hubble can't look at the earth because it's too bright. Even the nightside has so much light (human illumination, moonlight, lightning) that the Hubbles photodetectors would saturate and be permanently degraded or destroyed. The Hubble does not have a neutral density filter, just a shutter to block all light during servicing or if the attitude control that keeps it from seeing earth, moon, or sun goes south.
      • bs, the hubble routinely gets pointed towards the earth (mostly towards clouds) for calibration purposes (look for 'Earth flats' or 'Streak flats' on google)
    • Why don't hey ues the Hubble for satelite surveilance of the earth?

      I don't believe Hubble could, because it lacks Adaptive Optics [ucolick.org] that ground-based (and probably orbital surveillance) telescopes have. Without them, the atmosphere makes everything much to blurry. From the ground this makes stars appear to twinkle, and from Hubbles point of view it would make everything appear to wobble - so pictures would end up a blurry mess.

      Of course, you might be able to simulate Adaptive Optics in software ... ?

      Di
    • Mmm, yes, point it toward the earth! Sydney to be precise!

      There be a cute Aussie girl and I'd like to have a good look at her cleavage... for security reasons. She might be hiding a nuke there!

    • Re:Hubble (Score:3, Funny)

      by The Lynxpro ( 657990 )
      ...but could the Hubble's mirrors be used to effectively work as a giant magnifying glass? Then we could rename it the "Death Star". Paging Dr. Evil... :)
    • The sensors are too senstive and would burn out. They can't even point Hubble within 10(?) degrees of the moon, lest the sensors get fried.

      Besides, the NRO, not NASA, handles orbital spy sats, and their budget is good enough, and their resolution is pretty damned good, too.
      • by deathcow ( 455995 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @05:12PM (#6708055)
        There are hubble pictures of moon craters. See here, young man: Hubble shoots Ze Moon [hubblesite.org].

        I seriously therefore doubt all the posts about the Earth, even the nightside of the Earth, being too bright for Hubble to image. Too bright? Reduce your shutter speed !

        Also, one poster said the Earth is too close to focus on. Probably also incorrect. Remember the Hubble is ? a few hundred miles up ?. Typically with telescopes or camera lenses, the focus difference between "infinity focus" and "a few hundred miles" is non-existent. Not like the Hubble is exempt from being a telescope. As a matter of fact it's a Ritchey-Cretian telescope just like you can buy here on Earth from these dudes [rcopticalsystems.com].

        • I seriously therefore doubt all the posts about the Earth, even the nightside of the Earth, being too bright for Hubble to image. Too bright? Reduce your shutter speed !

          The Hubble has looked at the Earth before, technically -- the light from it was used to establish the point-to-point illumination pattern on the CCD. THe pictures aren't very useful though, as the HST is moving far too fast to keep an object stationary in the camera; in fact, the Earth pointings are called "streak flats" due to the Ea
    • Not only do they already have satellites built expressly for this purpose but for visual intelligence work the satellite needs to be in as low an orbit as possible and be in a near polar orbit so it passes over the area in question at approx the same time every day (to allow for height calculations). The Hubble fails on both accounts (plus for reasons others have mentioned).

      A plane is the best platform of all.
    • Re:Hubble (Score:3, Informative)

      by mraymer ( 516227 )
      Actually, according to the Bad Astronomer [badastronomy.com], the Hubble is sometimes pointed at Earth, for some sort of calibration tests. The images it returns are utterly useless, though. The Earth moves so fast relative to Hubble that all the images consist of is a mess of blurry colors.
  • I wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheVampire ( 686474 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:31PM (#6707416) Homepage
    if anyone has thought of them sending up a mission and grabbing the telescope, and hauling it to the ISS and attaching it to the station? It could then have maintainance done by the station crew, parts delivered along with the regular flights to the ISS, and would keep on giving us great information for many years to come.

    Robert
    • Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by TonyZahn ( 534930 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:44PM (#6707500) Homepage
      That's a great idea, although seeing as how I'm not an astro-physicist (IANAAP?) I'm not sure if that would be viable.

      I've thought for a while the best way to make a space station useful is to use it as a general settelite hosting platform. Build a dozen of these in geo-synch orbit (like the GPS sattelites), and mount different systems to them, like the aforementioned GPS, communications relays (TV, phone, etc.) and some outward-facing stuff like hubble. Then you can make money by charging people for hosting and upkeep, and keep a crew onboard for occastional maintenance.

      This would have the added bonus of consolidating a bunch of the sattelites spinning around the planet, making it safer for further launches. And forget the shuttle, it's too over-engineered and expensive. Stick to simple rockets and capsules, it's cheaper and more reliable. This is how you make money in space.

      Then, some day in the long run, you use these stations to assemble and launch real space-ships, ones that don't have to deal with the problems of getting to and from the bottom of a gravity well.

      Ahh, dreams...
      • <pedantic>
        GPS satellites aren't in geosynchronous orbit. They are in roughly 12-hour orbits at about 13,000mi. </pedantic>

      • Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Informative)

        1) The IIS is low orbit, that means that every now and then you have to boost [heavens-above.com] it back to higher altitudes. That is expensive (fuel) and expense increases with the load attached.

        2) As for hauling the Hubble, it is on a much higher orbit, enough higher that it is not feasible, even if it was desirable

        3) GPS sats are NOT geo-sync. Geo-sync sats are those that maintain the same position relative to a point in Earth's surface. The TV and comm sats are examples of those. Their orbits are all over the equator
      • There are currently no manned spacecraft available that can reach a geosynchronous orbit. It's a lot further away than where the current space station is.
    • Although I don't really know much about the techincal side of the ISS/Hubble I don't think there's anyway to attach it. They weren't designed to be hooked together so chances of something like that working are pretty small. (Unless you taped them together, but I doubt NASA would go for that).
    • Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Informative)

      by GeneralEmergency ( 240687 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:46PM (#6707519) Journal
      Hubble Altitude = 370 statute miles
      Space Station Altitude = 240 statute miles
      Difference = Waaaaay too much.

      • But if you measure the Hubble altitude in yards and the ISS altitude in meters the difference is much less...

        Oh wait didn't that cause a problem already?

        =tkk
      • Ummmm... They're attaching a propulsion unit to de-orbit it, right? Deorbit is at 0 statute miles, so it kinda has to pass through the neighborhood. If it was reversed, maybe that would be a problem...
      • Hubble Altitude = 370 statute miles

        Space Station Altitude = 240 statute miles
        Difference = Waaaaay too much.

        Altitude is not a problem. The problem is orbit inclination. Shuttles simply don't have the fuel on board to shift inclination from Hubble's orbit to ISS's orbit.

        Others have pointed out why you wouldn't want to even if the shuttle was capable of doing so.

        • Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Informative)

          by spaceyhackerlady ( 462530 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @05:27PM (#6708131)
          The problem is orbit inclination. Shuttles simply don't have the fuel on board to shift inclination from Hubble's orbit to ISS's orbit.

          More specifically (from Celestrak [celestrak.com])

          Hubble: 28 degrees inclination

          ISS: 51 degrees inclination

          Exercise for the student: work out the required delta V (here's a useful reference [yahoo.com]). Compare with the Shuttle's on-orbit delta V. It's cheaper (and lots easier) to land and get a fresh launch.

          ...laura

    • Re:I wonder... (Score:2, Informative)

      Most observations are made over a long period of time. The vibrations transmitted from the ISS would make observations impossible. There's also probably quite a bit of junk around the ISS which could foul up the Hubble.
    • by jfisherwa ( 323744 ) <jason.fisherNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:01PM (#6707616) Homepage
      I'm sure the idea has come up more than a few times at NASA, and I'd wager that the reason they can't do this is that the Hubble would be subject to more atmospheric interference at the ISS' altitude, limiting the Hubble's usefulness.

      Perhaps our next space station (which, hopefully, will be more of a space service station) will be positioned higher up, then they could keep satellites tethered to it for incremental upgrades and maintenance work.
      • Anther satellite that wouldn't work here is the Chandra X-ray telescope (and the proposed Constillation X project) both have to be in very high orbits to get above the background x-ray radiation of the earth's upper atmospheric fringe.
  • by mhesseltine ( 541806 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:38PM (#6707462) Homepage Journal

    I didn't see anything on the Hubble page linked above as to what it costs to keep the telescope in orbit. Other than a little maintainence, it can't be that much, can it? I know that a "little" is a relative term, but still. I'd say leave it up there for as long as possible.

    • NPR quoted it at $220 million/year last night.
      • by mhesseltine ( 541806 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:14PM (#6707687) Homepage Journal

        From NASA's about page [nasa.gov]

        Did you know that every day the Hubble Space Telescope archives 3 to 5 gigabytes of data and delivers between 10 and 15 gigabytes to astronomers all over the world?

        Ok, $220 million out of a budget which is projected for 2004 to be $15.47 billion or about 14%. For 3-5 GB of data per day (1.095-1.825 TB/year), this doesn't sound like that bad of a return on investment to me. Any word on how much data the new telescope will collect, and at what cost?

  • how it works (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Connie_Lingus ( 317691 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:39PM (#6707464) Homepage
    NASA had stated that it wanted to bring the Hubble down in 2006 to make room in its budget for the Webb

    Don't these scientist realize that in a government bureaucracy, the only way to get additional funding is to make sure the current system is 1)totally broke or 2)not in place?

    If NASA keeps the Hubble operational, then it will be a *much* harder sell on Capitol Hill then if no telescope exists! Even those this seems very non-intuitive, this is the way much of government works. These NASA guys aren't that dumb...they just know how the system works
  • Amazing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jeffkjo1 ( 663413 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:46PM (#6707524) Homepage
    Isn't it amazing the scientists can pretty much say, without a doubt, that the launch of the Webb telescope, which is nearly 7 years away, will likely be delayed?

    They know that NASA and the government is so lined with red-tape, and moves so slowly, that a project that is 7 years away won't be launched on time.

    It's even more amazing that when most people hear that it will likely be delayed, they aren't surprised in any way.
    • > Isn't it amazing the scientists can pretty much say, without a doubt, that the launch of the Webb telescope, which is nearly 7 years away, will likely be delayed? They know that NASA and the government is so lined with red-tape, and moves so slowly, that a project that is 7 years away won't be launched on time.

      What has that got to do with NASA and the big evile gummit? If someone announces a new game or OS, do you expect it to come out when they say it will?

      Also, the long lead time makes a miss mor

    • by msimm ( 580077 )
      Have you ever been involved in a large project? It's not just the government, its an issue of scale.
      • by mph ( 7675 )
        Have you ever been involved in a large project? It's not just the government, its an issue of scale.
        It's hardly even that. Ever had a contractor finish working on your house on time? Big projects, small projects, government projects, private projects, they all usually run late.

        I assume it's because when someone comes up with the original schedule, they never include a bunch of time labeled, "This is for all the shit that will go wrong unexpectedly."

    • Isn't it amazing the scientists can pretty much say, without a doubt, that the launch of the Webb telescope, which is nearly 7 years away, will likely be delayed?

      Perhaps they have already committed to using Windows Longhorn in the Webb project...

    • The only thing that amazes me is people keep support these institutions and the capitalist society that created them.

      Is everyone blind, deaf and stupid?
  • Not EVERYTHING captured by Hubble is pleasant to look at.
  • by amightywind ( 691887 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:58PM (#6707596) Journal

    The full story is also at:

    [spaceflightnow.com]

    This caught my eye:

    The 10-page report released Thursday outlined three options for NASA to choose from to achieve a transition from Hubble to the almost $1 billion James Webb Space Telescope, the planned successor to Hubble currently scheduled to launch in about 2011, aboard a European Ariane 5 booster.

    Why would NASA (or the US for that matter) allow such an expensive and high profile mission to fly on the worlds most unreliable rocket, when better domestic alternatives are available?

    • Why would NASA (or the US for that matter) allow such an expensive and high profile mission to fly on the worlds most unreliable rocket, when better domestic alternatives are available?

      Because in 7 years time, it will either be the most reliable rocket - or it will have been replaced. (Hopefully)

      That and ESA is a partner in the project. More Info [nasa.gov]
      • The Ariane V crashed not due to the rocket itself being unreliable but due to human error. The Ariane V accidentally got guidance software from its predecessor uploaded into its systems which caused the rocket overcorrect its trajectory, steering it too much off its course too quickly. The resulting forces of a blazing engine pushing against an overtilted rocket did the rest: it ruptured and exploded. Had the Ariane V's construction been at fault, it would have momst likely exploded much sooner. The acciden
        • The Ariane V accidentally got guidance software from its predecessor uploaded into its systems which caused the rocket overcorrect its trajectory

          I remember this well, a real shame. I wonder how much this simple error put back the European space program.

          The fact that the old software ran at all is weird, you'd think they would have updated all the computer hardware quite a bit since the Ariane IV is really quite old now.
        • I'm not an expert, but my gut feeling tells me that if a rocket survives its first 30 seconds, its construction is solid.

          Not to be pedantic, but tell that to the Challenger astronauts.

        • by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@@@gmail...com> on Friday August 15, 2003 @06:43PM (#6708536) Homepage
          The Ariane V crashed not due to the rocket itself being unreliable but due to human error. The Ariane V accidentally got guidance software from its predecessor uploaded into its systems which caused the rocket overcorrect its trajectory, steering it too much off its course too quickly.
          You are half right. They used earlier software *on purpose* to save the cost of developing new software. They further economized by not retesting the old software to certify in the new booster.
  • they should just keep the hubble working until it well, cant. dont decommision something that gives us as good pictures as these [stsci.edu] while it is still working.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:13PM (#6707681)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:19PM (#6707720)
    FYI: The cost to keep the Hubble in orbit and to maintain it is roughly 200 million a year.
    • Compare the amount that weve spent to keep the space station in orbit to the amount weve spent to keep hubble in orbit versus the amount of science generated by those dollars and hubble is looking better and better all the time.
  • by Red Rocket ( 473003 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:44PM (#6707890)
    Why doesn't NASA sponsor an X-Prize type contest where the first team to recover the Hubble gets to keep it under the same terms as the copyright of a new Disney movie. That would spur private space transportation development, save the Hubble from fiery death, and create pressure to shorten the terms on copyrights.

    I know, pie-in-the-sky. But so was Hubble, once.

  • by mpthompson ( 457482 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @04:48PM (#6707920)
    If the Hubble is going to be written off and dumped into the ocean anyway, it seems like this is an opportunity for some high-risk, but high-payoff gamble.

    For instance, it could be used to justify the development of an orbital tele-operated robot that would extend the senses and limbs of a repair technician on Earth into low orbit.

    Imagine a fairly light, solar powered, tele-operated robot launched into a parking orbit near the Hubble. New equipment and booster rockets could then be launched to the Hubble aboard a fairly low cost ferry rocket. The tele-operated robot would be activated by a remote operator to unpack the equipment from the supply ferry and re-supply the Hubble. Old equipment could be packed back into the ferry and dumped in the ocean. Aftewards, the tele-operated robot would return to it's parking orbit or if small enough simply cling to the side of the Hubble to wait for the next supply mission.

    It would be an amazing feat of technology to remotely service a device as complex as the Hubble without actual human presence. This would eliminate the huge overhead incurred by minimizing risk to human life on such missions and conceivably dramatically drive down the cost for maintenance and repair. It would also set precedence for even more complex construction and repair projects using such robots in space close enough where radio propagation delays don't impede operation.

    Coming up with a reasonably inexpensive way to keep the Hubble working for another 30 years would be a huge gift to Science, mankind and our children.

  • It just seems to me that NASA, SETI, and other institutions should be looking at the nearest star systems before looking any further beyond reasonable contact range just in case there is life out there. To me, you'd [any agency] would want to start with Alpha Centari (apologies if it is spelled "Centuri") since its only 4 light years-away. I've never heard any mention whether or not there are any planets in that star system. The closest star system to us [Sol system, Terra] I've heard confirmation of hav
    • Just for kicks, I'd also like to mention the irony that the first star system to be found to have planets outside our own solar system was Pegasus, the same star system the alledged aliens from the famous Betty & Barney Hill (not to be confused with Benny Hill) 1960s abduction indicated they were from... That discovery made me chuckle when I saw it the news report...
    • by GeoGreg ( 631708 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @05:08PM (#6708030)
      This has been done; a few years ago, someone thought they saw a planet in orbit around Proxima Centauri (the dwarf companion to the binary Alpha system). But this has apparently not been confirmed. See this link [solstation.com] for more information. As far as beaming transmissions at it, I'll bet somebody has done that. And I'll bet that radio telescopes have been pointed at it.
  • "...so what did we just blow up?"
    "The Hubble Telescope"

    Gotta love Zapp Branagon. I think we should just him take care of this matter.
  • by BennyTheBall ( 575374 ) <jrmartinezb@yah o o . c om.mx> on Friday August 15, 2003 @05:36PM (#6708186)
    From the article

    Moreover, the Webb is being designed for the infrared wavelengths that very distant galaxies would be emitting as they sped away in the expanding universe, not the visible wavelengths that Hubble sees so exquisitely.

    Does that mean that if it goes down the Webb wont be able to provide us with images such as the ones [hubblesite.org] found at the hubblesite archive [hubblesite.org]?

    If this is the case, then I hope every effort is made to keep the Hubble up there as long as possible. Perhaps it would be better for astronomy if the Hubble and the Webb would complement each other instead of having one replace the other.
    Just my 2 cts.

  • Why do they do this? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt.nerdflat@com> on Friday August 15, 2003 @06:27PM (#6708472) Journal
    Why do they stick more and more satelites into orbit when they're only going to ultimately fall back down to earth anyways?

    Here's a wild thought.... build these space telescopes right on the surface of the moon! They'd be able to make it as gawdawful huge as they wanted, since it would be terrain based, and they could broadcast the pics back to earth just like the Hubble does now. With multiple telescopes in the right places, they could even get a 360 degree view of the sky at any time (ie, they wouldn't have to wait for the moon to rotate into position)

    It's not like we don't have the technology to get there.

    • Why do they stick more and more satelites into orbit when they're only going to ultimately fall back down to earth anyways?

      A) The JWST is not going to be an Earth satellite. It will be placed at the L2 Lagrange point, which makes it more properly a satellite of both the Earth and the Sun. The L2 Lagrange point is very, very far away -- around a million miles from the Earth, and the JWST will have to travel for three months to get there.

      B) It's not going to fall back to the Earth. It will drift off i
  • by rice_burners_suck ( 243660 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @06:28PM (#6708476)

    If they want to continue paying for Hubble, why not allow private industry to use Hubble at a certain price? For example, charge so many dollars per minute for use of Hubble. NASA gets a clerk who schedules use of Hubble based on what people want to look at with it. Hubble is scheduled for maximum utilization, if at all possible. NASA actually does the work, making sure that nobody fscks up the telescope. When images come in, NASA could sell all kinds of additional services, like image processing.

    I know this isn't exactly a compelling business plan for a company like, say, Joe's Dent Repair or something, but think of the possibilities:

    • Pepsi puts hubble telescope images on its soda bottles and puts, "5% of every purchase supports continued research with Hubble Space Telescope!" Or research organizations use more of Hubble to continue their research. Or a charity could be set up. There are millions of possibilities out there. Why should this be paid for solely through tax dollars?
  • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @09:07PM (#6709619) Homepage
    For those of you who dislike nytimes registration,
    here is the newscientist link:

    http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns9 99 94061

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