Hubble Camera Down

j d worthington

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The primary camera on the Hubble telescope has been shut down:

Hubble's primary camera shuts down - Yahoo! News

BALTIMORE - The primary camera on the Hubble Space Telescope has shut down and is likely to be only marginally restored, NASA said Monday, a collapse one astronomer called "a great loss."

While other scientific work can still be done by the aging observatory, the unit that failed, the Advanced Camera for Surveys, is the one most scientists depend upon. NASA scientists say they expect to be able to restore just one-third of its observation ability, probably by mid-February.

"We're not optimistic at all" about returning it to full function, said Dave Leckrone, a senior scientist on the Hubble at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt.

However, all is not lost. Next year NASA plans to send space shuttle astronauts to upgrade the popular telescope in a mission to install new instruments that will actually exceed the capabilities of the current system.

The Hubble's main camera shut down over the weekend, the third outage in less than a year for the instrument. An initial investigation determined its backup power supply had failed, NASA said.

Installed during a March 2002 servicing mission, the Advanced Camera for Surveys increased Hubble's vision and has provided the clearest pictures yet of galaxy formation in the very early universe. The instrument consists of three electronic cameras, filters and dispersers that detect light from the ultraviolet to the near infrared.

It was the most heavily in demand from the astronomical community and accounted for two-thirds of the latest proposals for observing time on the Hubble, said Preston Burch, associate director and program manager for the Hubble Space Telescope at Goddard.

"I think it's important to remember that ACS was designed to work for five years. That's typically the design life of most of these instruments and it's pretty well met that," Burch said.

The story is through AP, by Alex Dominguez, datelined Mon., Jan. 29, 2007, and titled simply "Hubble's primary camera shuts down".
 
The primary camera on the Hubble telescope has been shut down:

Hubble's primary camera shuts down - Yahoo! News



The story is through AP, by Alex Dominguez, datelined Mon., Jan. 29, 2007, and titled simply "Hubble's primary camera shuts down".

What would we do without the shuttle? What will we do without the shuttle when the emphasis goes back to the moon and Mars?

I really do think it's time for all of us - USA, Russia, China, Japan, India and Europe - to pool our resources into these giant projects such as the Moon Base and manned exploration of Mars. Unless we do then there will always be some projects pushed to one side because of budget constraints. I know competition has been the push in the past for giant leaps, but enormous costs just can't be maintained unless we act together.
 

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