NASA to attempt to reboot Hubble Space Telescope

Tue Oct 14, 2008 7:50pm BST
 
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By Irene Klotz

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - NASA will attempt on Wednesday to revive the $2 billion (1.15 billion pound) Hubble Space Telescope, which was idled two weeks ago by an equipment failure, officials said on Tuesday.

The breakdown of a computer needed to relay science data to Earth prompted NASA to postpone until next year a long-awaited space shuttle mission to upgrade the orbital observatory. That flight, which had been slated for lift-off on Tuesday, was rescheduled for February.

Engineers plan to send commands to the telescope early on Wednesday to switch over to a backup computer that has not even been turned on since before the telescope arrived in orbit 18 years ago.

"It is obviously a possibility that things will not come up," said Art Whipple, the Hubble Space Telescope program manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt, Maryland.

"There's very little ageing that goes on with an unpowered component in space," he said. "It's actually a very benign storage environment."

If the operation is successful, Hubble should be conducting scientific work again by Friday, Whipple said.

By delaying the shuttle mission, NASA hopes to fly a replacement data handling computer to restore backup capability to the telescope. The mission is to be the fifth and final servicing call by space shuttle astronauts to the observatory.

The shuttle program is scheduled to end in two years.  Continued...

 
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