September 9, 2009 12:59 PM PDT

Repaired Hubble telescope back in action

by William Harwood
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NASA scientists showed off spectacular new pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope Wednesday, a stunning gallery of remote galaxies, a stellar nursery, an enormous globular cluster packed with countless pinpoint stars, and a dying sun blowing off its outer atmosphere in butterfly-like wings of debris.

Planetary nebula NGC 6302, a star in the final stages of its life, in a dramatic new photo from the repaired Hubble Space Telescope.

(Credit: NASA)

The pictures clearly show the fabled telescope is back in action, ready to resume its role as one of the most productive observatories on or off the planet, thanks to a dramatic five-spacewalk shuttle repair mission last May.

"Every field of astrophysics, whether it's our local neighborhood of planets, nearby stars and their attendant planets, galaxies, clusters of galaxies, out to the edge of the universe, every field has questions that are awaiting the power of Hubble," said Heidi Hammel, senior research scientist at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo. "You're only getting the tiniest taste of what the astronomers are planning to do with Hubble over as many years as it can last.

"We're giddy with the quality of the data that we have with this new telescope," she said. "We're especially excited to have the spectrographic data restored to Hubble. ... We are entering a new era of astronomy. Hubble's new beginning is just setting the stage for what's going to be coming."

The shuttle Atlantis roared into orbit May 11 on a fifth and final mission to service and upgrade the space telescope. The flight was canceled by former Administrator Sean O'Keefe in the wake of the 2003 Columbia disaster because heat shield repair techniques were not available and because a Hubble crew, operating in a different orbit, could not seek safe haven aboard the space station if a major problem prevented a safe re-entry.

Michael Griffin, O'Keefe's successor, reinstated the repair mission after spacewalking astronauts demonstrated heat shield repair techniques. He also ordered engineers to process a second shuttle in parallel to serve as an emergency rescue vehicle if needed.

A small portion of the 10-million-star Omega Centauri globular cluster orbiting the core of the Milky Way.

(Credit: NASA)

During Atlantis' mission, four spacewalkers, working in two-man teams, carried out five back-to-back spacewalks to install six new stabilizing gyroscopes, six new nickel-hydrogen battery packs, a replacement data computer, and two new instruments, the $132 million Wide Field Camera 3 and the $88 million Cosmic Origins Spectrograph. Like all modern Hubble instruments, both were equipped with corrective optics to counteract the spherical aberration that prevents Hubble's 94.5-inch mirror from achieving a sharp focus.

The Atlantis astronauts also repaired two other instruments: the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, which suffered a power supply failure in 2004, and the Advanced Camera for Surveys, which broke down in 2007. Neither instrument was designed to be serviced in orbit, but engineers devised custom tools and an ingenious plan that allowed the spacewalkers to bypass the failed electronics.

The repair crew installed an upgraded fine guidance sensor, new insulation, and a grapple fixture that will permit a future spacecraft to lock on and drive Hubble out of orbit when it is no longer able to do science.

"Bottom line, these professionals left Hubble as a new state-of-the-art telescope," said Ed Weiler, NASA's associate administrator for space science. "This is the fifth time we've had a new telescope up there, capable of continuing its historic scientific journey for at least five more years and, I would bet, a long time after that."

While enormous ground-based telescopes currently on the drawing boards will dwarf Hubble's relatively modest mirror, Weiler said its position above the atmosphere guarantees it will remain at the forefront of astronomy for years to come.

Along with unparalleled wide-field views of the cosmos, "the other thing Hubble can do that can never, ever be done from the ground is imaging in the ultraviolet and imaging in some of the near infrared wavelengths of light," Hammel said. "Because our Earth's atmosphere absorbs the photons before they get to the surface of the Earth.

Visible light and infrared views of a star-forming cloud, showing an infant sun in the previously unseen interior.

(Credit: NASA)

"So you could make a football field-sized telescope and never collect a photon because they aren't there. Hubble is absolutely unique, we must have a telescope in space to complement the very large telescopes on the ground. Hubble is absolutely unique at those wavelengths. Nothing else can do it."

Asked to predict how Hubble will be remembered a century from now, senior Project Scientist David Leckrone said "we need to be humble. But in all humility, I truly believe that Hubble has fundamentally changed the course of modern astronomy and astrophysics. And it's taken it in new directions."

"I think we have basically shoved aside the old textbooks and the old concepts of the universe we live in that were based entirely on this distorted view we have through the Earth's atmosphere. And we have laid a foundation of clear vision that is the starting point from which all future UV/optical and near-infrared astronomy will proceed."

NASA spent some $887 million on the final Hubble servicing mission, pushing the total cost of the project to around $10 billion since its inception in the late 1970s.

William Harwood has been covering the U.S. space program full-time since 1984, first as Cape Canaveral bureau chief for United Press International and now as a consultant for CBS News. He has covered more than 115 shuttle missions, every interplanetary flight since Voyager 2's flyby of Neptune, and scores of commercial and military launches. Based at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Harwood is a devoted amateur astronomer and co-author of "Comm Check: The Final Flight of Shuttle Columbia." You can follow his frequent status updates at the CBSNews.com Space Place, where this story was first published.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (21 Comments)
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by DesktopIntegration September 9, 2009 2:11 PM PDT
Like the Concorde Airplane, it wlll be sad when it's gone but taught us a lot about the possiblities and steered the direction of future technologies. Way cool Photos. We are so tiny.
Reply to this comment
by MyRightEye September 9, 2009 2:25 PM PDT
Man, never get tired of what the hubble treats us with. Oh wait, I endorse Intelligent Design, so, well, I could not possibly be interested in such nonsense. I forgot, sorry.
Reply to this comment
by djwapstik September 9, 2009 7:29 PM PDT
A little defensive about your intelligent design theory...didn't see any comments antagonizing you to make a comment like that. Try yoga or more exercise to get out those pent up frustrations....
by paisley98 September 9, 2009 2:31 PM PDT
Hi, this is a great article, I'm using it for my current events at my school HFA:SCS in Detroit. I'm in the 6th grade.
Reply to this comment
by RT1963 September 9, 2009 2:33 PM PDT
The money and repair that have gone into the Hubble are worth every penny. Spectacular images and scientific progress, in one trip. Way to go NASA. America and the rest of the world need to keep funding and exploring above our atmosphere. Knowledge is the key to humanity's survival.
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by r13k1 September 9, 2009 2:43 PM PDT
Bill, Thanks for all the hard work you do associated with NASA. As said before, we are truely so tiny and so unappreciative of all the wonderful things we have seen and achieved in our life time!!!
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by geodude360 September 9, 2009 3:45 PM PDT
Why'd it take 3 months for the first pics to come out? Is there something they're hiding? oOoOoOo. Censoring the images.... little green men. hahaha
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by Jive Turkey September 9, 2009 5:56 PM PDT
why no links?
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by avid_observer September 9, 2009 6:53 PM PDT
To think if the governments of the world would spend 10 billion dollers over almost four decades. And come up with something like or better than Hubble what we'd really know. Truely sad to see how little resources have gone into this and how truely amazing the images returned are. That more projects such as this or the SPT aren't in the works, leaves me just flabbergasted. But yeah truely pretty amazing.....
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by gertruded September 9, 2009 8:23 PM PDT
What do Wallstreet Banksters care about the Hubble telescope. It doesn't make them any money. They have made their choice as to what is important, and that is why so little money has been spent on Hubble like projects.
by Reubescol September 9, 2009 9:46 PM PDT
Why is NASA not regaining some of its costs by selling photo-books of Hubbles pictures to the public?
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by anstronomybuff September 9, 2009 9:59 PM PDT
Can we use the Hubble to eliminate the disbelievers who insist that we never did land on the moon? If the Hubble was able to show the expended booster sitting on the surface of the moon at Tranquility Base, next to the American flag, would this not lend evidence needed to squelch the disbelievers?
Just a thought.
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by darkridedp September 9, 2009 11:41 PM PDT
Unfortunately, the moon is too close. The Hubble would need a macro lens
by gertruded September 10, 2009 4:05 AM PDT
A couple of months ago the new lunar orbiter that is looking for spots for the new moon landings DID take an image of the Apollo Moon landing sites. The lunar landing stage is clearly visable in the images.

There is no sense in in even talking to the disbelievers as crazy people do not listen to logic or facts. When I meet such people I just walk away as life is too short to put up with such nonsense. There are people that are not worth listening too.
by anstronomybuff September 10, 2009 12:58 PM PDT
gertruded --- Can you give me the web site or other location where I can see this image with the lunar landing stage visible? THanks
by maicaw September 11, 2009 9:41 PM PDT
astronomybuff:
The lunar lander pictures are here

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LRO/multimedia/lroimages/apollosites.html
by maicaw September 11, 2009 9:44 PM PDT
LRO photos of appolo clutter

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LRO/multimedia/lroimages/apollosites.html
by mullawa September 10, 2009 5:27 AM PDT
How clever the people who concieved the idea of Hubble, built it, got it into orbit, fixed it's origional problem, and have kept it going so long. It has been a a wonderous thing.
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by juliannegross September 10, 2009 7:44 AM PDT
Is there a way to purchase a photo of this "delicate butterfly" picture from the Hubble Space Telescope from Sept 9, 2009?
Reply to this comment
by tonym1941 September 10, 2009 3:32 PM PDT
NASA is a government funded with our tax dollars and they give the pictures away at

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html
by tonym1941 September 10, 2009 3:32 PM PDT
Free images availabe at

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html
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Timely coverage of breaking space news, from shuttle operations and assembly of the International Space Station to planetary exploration, space science, and development of the next generation of manned spacecraft. You can follow Bill Harwood's frequent status updates at the CBSNews.com Space Place.

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