NASA's
Hubble Space Telescope is now on duty minus one operational gyroscope.
The
space agency announced August 31 that ground controllers have shut down one of
the three operational gyros onboard the orbiting eye on the universe. Doing so is
expected to preserve the overall health of that third gyro--thus extend the
space observatory's science gathering through mid-2008, an eight-month
extension.
Hubble
Space Telescope (HST) gyroscopes are critical to running the Earth orbiting
facility's complex pointing control system. That system maintains precise
pointing of the telescope during science observations.
NASA has noted that the system was
originally designed to operate on three gyros, with another three in reserve.
Two of the six are no longer functional.
"Hubble
science on two gyros will be indistinguishable from the superb science we have
become accustomed to over the years," said David Leckrone, a senior Hubble
scientist at the space agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland,
as highlighted in a NASA press statement.
Science impact
But
while HST's observational campaigns can still be accomplished, working on two
gyros does come at a price.
"Saying
there is little or no impact on science data quality is not quite the same
thing as saying there is no impact on the overall Hubble science program," said
Bruce Margon, Associate Director for Science the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
The
two gyro mode "does make overall scheduling considerably more complex, and,
perhaps worse," Margon told SPACE.com, and excludes observations of
certain parts of the sky for a fair fraction of any given year.
"So
we eventually can still get to any target we could get to with three gyros, but
maybe not when we would like to," Margon said. "This makes following up
unexpected
transient events, for example, far more awkward and sometime not possible."
Margon
said that initial tests of the two gyro mode, and the requisite software
needed, were fleshed out many months ago. It was found that the image
degradation was surprisingly small, so that science impacts on a given
observation should be almost negligible, except for a very small number of
rather arcane modes.
"Based
on those tests, NASA approved permanent entry into two gyro mode starting this
week," Margon said. "Our initial scientific results from observations this week
appear to show no surprises, although those very recent data are still being
studied."
Reboost, deorbit decisions
Meanwhile,
there are indications that a robotically-attached deorbit module for the Hubble
Space Telescope has been cancelled. That no-go decision appears predicated on
the ability for a human servicing mission to Hubble, sometime in the future.
As
reported by SPACE.com August 22, the idea of hooking a special deorbit
module to the Hubble Space Telescope has apparently been scrapped by NASA.
"It
does not look like a propulsion module will be necessary for a shuttle servicing
mission," said Chris Shank, special assistant to NASA chief, Michael Griffin,
at the 8th International Mars Society Convention, held August 11-14 at the
University of Colorado at Boulder.
Meanwhile,
the HST is not likely to fall back to Earth prior to 2020. Although if the Sun
is much more active than expected next cycle, reentry might occur a little
earlier...perhaps by a few years, said Nicholas Johnson, NASA Orbital Debris
Program Manager and Chief Scientist for Orbital Debris at the NASA Johnson
Space Center in Houston, Texas.
Johnson
emphasized that this is considered very unlikely. "If another
servicing mission is undertaken, HST would probably be given another small
boost in altitude at its conclusion. This would further delay a
natural reentry of HST," he told SPACE.com via email.
In
a related development, Shank noted at the Mars Society meeting that HST's
follow-on space scope--the James Webb Space Telescope--is skyrocketing in cost.
"There's a $1 billion cost overrun that we're looking at," he said.