The aging Hubble telescope, which has peered into the depths
of space for 18 years was due to for an upgrade and a repair soon, but it looks
like that will have to wait for as much as six months. Critical electronic equipment,
the Control and Data Handling Unit, failed leaving scientists and astronauts to
wait until a replacement unit is prepared.
The Control and Data Handling Unit is a computer which
manages the Hubble Telescope’s five main scientific instruments, receiving data
from them using a microprocessor-based Control Unit/Science Data Formatter
(CU/SDF), and formats it into packets to be transmitted down to Earth to be
interpreted. The Hubble is equipped with two of these units, one Side A, the
main system, which failed, and one side B, a redundant backup system.
All attempts by scientists to reset or at least obtain a
memory dump from the Side A formatter have met with failure, and they are
forced to build and install a replacement. Until then, the science team is
attempting to switch operations to side B. The backup formatter hasn’t been
turned on since the telescope’s launch 18 years ago, and even if turning it on
did go according to plan, all the other instruments in the telescope would have
to be rerouted to output to it. While in theory, this could be achieved from ground
control at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, this has
never been attempted, and it is unknown if it will succeed. If it doesn’t, the
Hubble telescope will be totally inoperative until the faulty computer is
replaced.
Scientists have suggested a reason for Side A’s failure: The
Hubble space telescope operates at very high temperature, and this could have
accelerated the equipment’s decay, and so could have prolonged exposure to open
space radiation.
Astronauts from the shuttle Atlantis were scheduled, over
five spacewalks, to install an ultraviolet spectrograph to the Hubble
telescope, as well as a new wide-field camera, a new set of gyroscopes, and
repair electronic failures on the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and the
Advanced Camera for Surveys. This set of upgrades was to extend the Hubble’s
operational life for about another five years before it was finally allowed to
drop from orbit and burn in the atmosphere.
Now the mission, which was due for an October 14 liftoff, and
was going to put seven astronauts in orbit for a period of 11 days will be delayed
till February, maybe even April next year due to a change in objectives, as the
replacement Side A formatter is prepared, and astronauts are trained in its
installation.
Despite the frustration involved, Ed Weiler, associate
administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate looks on the bright side,
saying that it’s better that the formatter failed now, rather than after the repair mission.