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NASA Says 'No' To Hubble Reprieve
BBC ^
| 2-10-2004
| Dr David Whitehouse
Posted on 02/10/2004 7:21:34 AM PST by blam
Nasa says 'no' to Hubble reprieve
By Dr David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor
Shuttle visits are essential for Hubble Nasa has given a final "no" to requests for it to change its mind and grant a reprieve to the Hubble Space Telescope. It follows opposition to Nasa's chief, Sean O'Keefe's decision, that servicing missions should be cancelled because of astronaut safety concerns.
New rules, following the loss of space shuttle Columbia last year, do not allow a Hubble visit by astronauts.
The US space agency has said that if it is not serviced, Hubble will probably last only a few more years.
Unpopular decision
"There is life beyond Hubble, as much as I hate to admit that," said Ed Weiler, Nasa's head of space science, responding to critics.
Weiler, and other officials, took issue with press reports and leaked Nasa documents that argued it was no riskier for astronauts to pay a service call to Hubble than it was for them to build the International Space Station (ISS).
The reports, written by Nasa engineers who declined to be named, argued against the unpopular decision to forgo a scheduled shuttle mission to repair and upgrade Hubble in 2005 or 2006.
Without that mission, which would repair failing gyroscopes and upgrade detectors, the telescope will eventually stop functioning and will need to be nudged out of orbit toward Earth in a controlled descent.
During a news conference, Weiller, along with Bill Readdy, head of space flight at Nasa, and John Grunsfeld, the agency's chief scientist, expressed regret at the expected end of the Hubble project.
No safe haven
Readdy, a former shuttle astronaut, said Nasa had already analysed the question of whether to send astronauts to fix Hubble, and determined that it was unsafe.
He added that Hubble offers no "safe haven" for astronauts seeking refuge from a damaged shuttle, while the ISS does.
"The documents (from the engineers) really did not go into the kind of depth and detail that we already had," Readdy said, who faulted the two engineers' reports for their "superficial" analysis.
Regarding a possible shuttle mission to Hubble, Readdy said schedule pressures and logistics would be formidable, especially if Nasa were required to ready two shuttles simultaneously - one to service Hubble and a second to wait on an adjacent launch pad if a rescue was needed.
Grunsfeld, a former shuttle astronaut who was on the last Hubble servicing mission aboard shuttle Columbia in 2002, had personal feelings about the telescope.
"I'm in the position of being the last person ever to hug Hubble," Grunsfeld said. "I know we've allowed the American public to fall in love with Hubble, for good reason".
But he said that the decision not to service Hubble was based on "a good rationale".
"So we have a family member that has now a timetable for when that family member's going to depart and we all feel bad," he said. "I think the most important thing is to make sure that the time we have left is quality time."
TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hubble; nasa; no; reprieve
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1
posted on
02/10/2004 7:21:35 AM PST
by
blam
To: blam
Bummer.
2
posted on
02/10/2004 7:22:57 AM PST
by
Huck
(I am voting for Bush, but I will question his performance at my own discretion.)
To: blam
The incredibly stupid decisions of this administration continue to amaze me. I never thought I would seen a Republican administration show such an inability to think. I never thought I would see NASA display such fear at the thought of sending a man into space. NASA needs to get out of the space business, NASA doesn't have the neccessary guts to go into space.
3
posted on
02/10/2004 7:27:51 AM PST
by
jpsb
(Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
To: blam
Regarding a possible shuttle mission to Hubble, Readdy said schedule pressures and logistics would be formidableWell, if it's difficult, might as well not try to do it at all! Somewhere along the line, the "right stuff" became the "timid stuff."
To: jpsb
You going to volunteer to fix Hubble?
5
posted on
02/10/2004 7:31:57 AM PST
by
Dave S
To: blam
which would repair failing gyroscopes and upgrade detectors, the telescope will eventually stop functioning and will need to be nudged out of orbit toward Earth in a controlled descent Why deorbit?... why not give it a bump into a higher orbit, do an orderly shut down and put it in "deep freeze" til we have a way to fix it?
Unless of course Hubble is a little on the obsolete side...and better technology is coming on line soon.... then it's just a matter of some scientists wanting to keep their jobs at the peril of others (Just Idle Thoughts....JIT)
6
posted on
02/10/2004 7:36:09 AM PST
by
Robe
(Rome did not create a great empire with meetings, they did it by killing all those who opposed them)
To: jpsb
A binding constraint to return to flight is that Shuttle must have a safe haven, and the ISS is the only choice for the timeframe of a Hubble servicing mission. You can't launch a shuttle mission to both Hubble and ISS.
NASA get's bashed for not following the rules and not having enough safety measures in place, so it establishes a no-tolerance policy against rule-breaking, along with new rules to acheive a greater safety margin for the program. Then people get all up in arms when the rules restrain the available missions, so there's a bunch of complaining that NASA's "not thinking" or is somehow cowardly.
I want to see Hubble refurbished, too. But it won't be a shuttle mission to do it, since the people signing the check have demanded more restraints. For NASA's blame in this, if it had followed existing rules we may not have been discussing the whole issue.
It's a mess.
7
posted on
02/10/2004 7:39:13 AM PST
by
Frank_Discussion
(May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
To: blam
Maybe the Administration and NASA ought to try to sell the Hubble to the highest bidder. Then it is out of their hands, and some money in the pocket to boot. I also think that NASA should be put on the market and turned into a private industry.
8
posted on
02/10/2004 7:39:16 AM PST
by
Core_Conservative
(ODC-GIRL - the love of my life! - supporting Homeland Defense!)
To: blam
The thing is obsolete; better pictures are available from giant ground scopes with adaptive optics. The shuttle itself is obsolete and should remain grounded. If we lose another one, I
guarantee the last two will never fly.
There's a better replacement for Hubble on the way (Webb); be patient.
--Boris
9
posted on
02/10/2004 7:44:41 AM PST
by
boris
(The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
To: blam
Good thing we spent all that money on a manned shuttle program. After all, would we want to forego all of the benefits of sending people into space, as opposed to less expensive robots? Humans can make repairs on existing satellites, and can solve problems that machines can't.
Oh wait, they can't. It turns out that a hundred billion dollars later it's too dangerous to send men to fix satellites. Oh well.
10
posted on
02/10/2004 7:52:59 AM PST
by
Timm
To: boris
Have you ever heard the expression "a bird in hand". Web is still on the drawing board and with 500 billion dollar deficets, new entitlement programs, a commitment to the ISS a dollar droping like a rock and a "new mission" to go to trhe moon and mars,(yea right, like we've got a trillion dollars for that) there is a good chance Web will never be built. Even if Web is built and successfully launched it is not a low earth orbit telescope, if anything goes wrong (Murphy) Web will be space junk. Hubble is up thre and working extremely well, doing great science, you want to trade that for a promise to do something in 10 years or so?
11
posted on
02/10/2004 8:01:37 AM PST
by
jpsb
(Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
To: blam; Poohbah; section9; veronica; Catspaw; Dog; Howlin; Miss Marple; PhiKapMom
Dumb does not begin to describe this one...
Until the replacement is up and running, kleep the Hubble going. If they have to, re-rig Enterprise to go up to fix Hubble. But this is just mind-boggling.
12
posted on
02/10/2004 8:06:41 AM PST
by
hchutch
("I never get involved with my own life. It's too much trouble." - Michael Garibaldi)
To: boris
"There's a better replacement for Hubble on the way (Webb); be patient." That's what I've read also.
13
posted on
02/10/2004 8:11:50 AM PST
by
blam
To: blam
Hmmm..."Webb" and "Hubble"...I'm having flashbacks... ;)
To: hchutch
The only 'dumb' thing they did was not get a space plane replacement ready. The shuttle's just too creaky for missions at this point. I hate to see Hubble go too, but we need a new one and a new delivery/maintenence system first.
15
posted on
02/10/2004 8:15:35 AM PST
by
Monty22
To: Monty22
Too bad the Clinton Adminsitration killed NASP, VentureStar and the DC-X. The DC-X really had promise - but it came from the SDI program and that made it anathema to the Left.
16
posted on
02/10/2004 8:22:01 AM PST
by
hchutch
("I never get involved with my own life. It's too much trouble." - Michael Garibaldi)
To: hchutch
" re-rig Enterprise to go up to fix Hubble. But this is just mind-boggling "
Re-rig Enterprise?........Now thats mind boggling.
Best thing for hubble, push it to a high parking orbit, with a unmanned manned rocket pack, then service it with a C.E.V> test flight. Save some old technology as we develope some new technology.
17
posted on
02/10/2004 8:24:41 AM PST
by
Kakaze
To: blam
They just can't win for losing. They get slammed for non-safety and then get slammed for concentrating on safety. They are responding to what the public wants, which is what agencies should do, and the public wants safety at this time.
18
posted on
02/10/2004 8:54:51 AM PST
by
Arkinsaw
To: boris
There's a better replacement for Hubble on the way (Webb); be patient. True, but do we have the launch capacity without the shuttle to put it in orbit?
To: Dave S
You going to volunteer for Hubble?
In a heartbeat!
20
posted on
02/10/2004 9:08:36 AM PST
by
isiti
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