A possible Shuttle mission to save hubble

Status
Not open for further replies.
A

ascan1984

Guest
If it colud happen that would be amazing. ~The story from this website is below.<br /><br />NASA's new Administrator Mike Griffin told reporters today that he informed key members of Congress Thursday evening that he would direct engineers at Goddard Spaceflight center to start preparing for a space shuttle servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope on the assumption that one ultimately will go forward.<br /><br />Griffin's predecessor, Sean O'Keefe, cancelled a planned Hubble mission in January 2004. O'Keefe cited safety concerns in the wake of the shuttle Columbia disaster. <br /><br />Astronomers, politicians and the public have been up in arms about the cancellation ever since. A review board of experts assembled by O'Keefe recommended a shuttle mission to Hubble be reconsidered, but O'Keefe never budged. He was, however, persuaded to consider a robotic mission to service the telescope, which if it does not get new batteries and gyroscopes will cease to function in the next two to three years.<br /><br />There is no replacement for Hubble's visible-light acuity even in the serious planning stages.<br /><br />When Griffin came aboard earlier this month, he promised to reconsider sending astronauts to Hubble, but at the time announced no specific moves in that direction. He also said there would be no robotic effort to upgrade the observatory.<br /><br />Something eventually must be done. At a minimum, a robotic mission would have to be mounted to attach a device that could safely de-orbit Hubble, otherwise it would make an uncontrolled and potentially dangerous re-entry on its own time.<br /><br />Griffin said today that a final decision on any possible crewed servicing mission is still pending NASA’s successful return to flight with the launch of the shuttle Discovery. However, with that launch now delayed nearly two more months, Griffin said the Goddard team has to get started now to preserve the option of saving Hubble before the popular telescope is scheduled to go d
 
S

SpaceKiwi

Guest
To this I say, ha-lay-bloody-loo-ya!<br /><br />Old 'Blinky' Griffin seems to have the right perspective on this. ie; not driven by knee-jerk emotional response. Provided he reviews the <b>facts</b> of a Hubble servicing mission, this has to be a slam-dunk 'go' for Shuttle.<br /><br />Add one more to the manifest. <img src="/images/icons/smile.gif" /> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p><em><font size="2" color="#ff0000">Who is this superhero?  Henry, the mild-mannered janitor ... could be!</font></em></p><p><em><font size="2">-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------</font></em></p><p><font size="5">Bring Back The Black!</font></p> </div>
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts