The
delicate equipment to refurbish the 18-year-old Hubble Space Telescope has
begun arriving at Kennedy Space Center, presenting payload managers with one of
their greatest challenges.
The gear includes spare
parts for failing components, two new instruments, six gyroscopes and six,
125-pound
(57 kg) batteries. The nearly 2,500 pounds (1,133 kg) of electronics will fill
four pallets, each of which must be provided electrical power and climate
control.
"On this
particular mission we are carrying more flight hardware to orbit than any
other of the previous (Hubble) missions," said Hubble Observatory Manager
Thomas Griffin, whose team is responsible for installing the instruments onto
the carriers.
Astronauts have
visited Hubble four times to make repairs since it was launched in 1990.
This payload is light
compared with the 32,000-pound (14,514 kg) Kibo module that shuttle Discovery
took to the International Space Station in May. However, Atlantis must climb to
an orbit of nearly 360 miles (579 km), much higher than the station at
approximately 220 miles (354 km).
Each piece of equipment for
the Hubble must be tested at Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, shipped
to KSC, attached to its pallet and loaded into the shuttle payload canister.
Pallets began arriving, the
first of 16 shipments to KSC. The shipments end Sept. 4, only one month before
the launch.
"Every week we bring
another flight element here, process it and get it ready," Griffin said.
"Everything's not coming at the same time, so we can focus the individual
hardware team on a particular element.
"The schedule is well
thought out and paced," Griffin said. "A good analogy is building a
vehicle at an auto assembly plant."
As the observatory manager,
Griffin is eager to see what the Hubble Space Telescope will produce with new
cameras that improve resolution by 15 to 35 times. Hubble's spectacular views
of faraway galaxies will
be even more detailed.
"It's great to see it
all come together," he said. "The (new) cameras are going to provide
orders of magnitude improvement.
"Who knows the science
we'll get from the upgraded Hubble. We've always been surprised."
Though loading the
instruments into the payload canister without damage is crucial, the intense
care continues all the way to the launch pad.
"The complexities of
the interfaces and the criticality are much greater with the Hubble than with
the space station payloads," NASA payload manager Deborah Hahn said.
Hahn's team will care for
the Hubble equipment once it's loaded into the shuttle payload canister, where
its temperature and condition will be monitored.
"There's a lot more
data to review and understand," she said.
At the pad, the four
pallets will be loaded into the shuttle at once, with four sets of power and
data cables to hook up in the shuttle payload bay.
"The closeouts are a
little more involved," Hahn said. Ground support equipment, such as air
conditioners and generators, won't be removed from the launch pad until just
before launch.
"It'll be very late in
the countdown," Hahn said. "We're going out to the pad a month before
launch. Right up to the last minute, they'll be doing battery charging.
"Basically, we're
getting out just before the payload door closing starts."
Atlantis will be rolled out
to Pad 39A on Aug. 29, and Endeavour will be moved to Pad 39B to be ready to
act as a rescue craft. Hubble orbits about 150 miles (241 km) above the space
station, too far for Atlantis to seek safe harbor there in an emergency.
Even if all goes well with
loading the parts, Atlantis with its delicate cargo will be on the launch pad
during September, which makes the shuttle vulnerable to bad weather that might
delay the Oct. 8 launch.
"What we're dreading
right now is a hurricane," Hahn said. "That is because of being in
the flow (and) having two orbiters at the pad. We're very concerned."
Published under license from FLORIDA TODAY. Copyright © 2001
FLORIDA TODAY. No portion of this material may be reproduced in any way without
the written consent of FLORIDA TODAY.