Farewell To Eyes Above And Below 136
LMCBoy writes "SpaceRef is reporting that the STIS Instrument on board HST has failed. The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph was HST's only spectrometer, and was responsible for several important discoveries, including the first detection of an exoplanet's atmosphere.
The loss is believed to have been caused by a failure in the instrument's main electronics box, which led to a rapid increase in the input current of about 1 ampere, which caused the instrument to enter a "suspend" state. It is believed that this failure is not recoverable."
No_Weak_Heart writes "Perhaps the world's most renowned submersible, Alvin of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, is slated for retirement. Alvin has helped scientists explore deep sea, find a lost Hydrogen bomb(oops!) and discover more than 300 new animal species, will be replaced by a newer version in 2008. Also available this audio clip from NPR." (Here's a glance at Alvin's replacement.) Update: 08/07 17:29 GMT by T : Note: "HST"="Hubble Space Telescope." Thanks to Chris Johansen for pointing out the overloaded acryonym.
Hopefully this.... (Score:5, Interesting)
A friend of mine's dad has been pulled out of semi-retirement to help design a light receptor to be fitted to the hubble, which would be able to detect accurately induvidual photons of light.
So if this failure leads to the collapse of the Hubble Reborn project, he'll be out of a job, and more importantly out of a damn interesting project.
Conspiracy Theory (Score:2)
They want to kill the Hubble..the pretty picture loving public wants to save it...thus it's a PR nightmare for NASA.
So they felt the need to tell us that something was wrong in an attempt to get us to say "oh well, it's broken now...go ahead and kill it".
I for one am not buying it. I think that the Hubble is alive and well and functioning fine, just like Jim Morrison, Elvis and the second gunman.
wbs.
Re:Conspiracy Theory (Score:1)
The sci-fi conspiracy lover in me figures that ALIENS BROKE IT so we wouldn't find their home planet.
Re:Hopefully this.... (Score:1)
Bottom line: I seriously doubt we'll see both toys in the sky working at the same time.
[1] See George Carlin: "Flammable, infl
Re:Hopefully this.... (Score:1)
So long.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So long.. (Score:2)
Re:So long.. (Score:3, Funny)
It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:1, Flamebait)
The Hubble is done. Deal with it. If the geniuses in Congress decides that our hard earned tax dollars are better spent putting up a new scope up than feeding the poor, educating our children, or researching cures for deadly diseases, we can have another one.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:1, Insightful)
But noooo, why do something good if there are still people to kill and oilfields to capture....
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:1)
We need to spend money on important problems like a solution to the heat-death of the universe. Compared to that, everything else is small potatoes.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
Until medical ability leaves me pretty confident my death will be a result of the heat death of the universe I'm not to worried about it.
Hmm, just thought a a great life insurance scam to get people like you. For the low price of 5 dollars a month you can get 50 million dollars in protection against the heat death of the universe. Should the universe die of heat death we will pay your loved ones 50 million US dollars. I'll make millions.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh, yeah
The Hubble is done. Deal with it. If the geniuses in Congress decides that our hard earned tax dollars are better spent putting up a new scope up than feeding the poor, educating our children, or researching cures for deadly diseases, we can have another one.I am curious. At what time in our past history, or any societies history for that matter, have we been able to feed all, educate all, and have absolutely no disease? None that I am aware of. But I do note that in history, societies always do better when they persue science and technologies. Historically, that was when they where engaged in a war off their soil. When the war is on their soil, science and technology stop. So how do we increase our science. One approach is simply start worthless wars that do little for us. Hummmmmm. Rome did that for eons. Perhaps others have as well.
But a better time was when a society sought something beyond their grasp. England migrating all over the world is a good example (interesting that they were not the original discover, but took advantage of it). The original Space shot did more us than any other war did. And it was a whole lot cheaper than any war that we engaged in.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:1, Troll)
And don't give me any crap about this being about 'science'. To think that is either naive or disingenuous. Imagine if a similar
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
While I agree that we should not be giving blank checks to science, just because a project is past its design lifetime doesn't mean we should stop funding it. Instead we need to weigh the expected gain by adding funding, to transferring to elsewhere. Hubble was built years ago, maintain it or not, and it will continue to orbit the earth. (Until it reenters, which is a situation to understand and deal with) If the value of the science from maintaining hubble is greater than the value of the science from
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:3, Insightful)
When will this stupid argument stop... "We can put a man on the moon but..."
Did you know that the population of the US spend more money on potato chips last year than Nasa?
Get over it. If you are so worried about the poor stop spending you money on consoles, cable tv, and Ipods and g
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
Keeping Hubble up there would cost billions of dollars, plus the risk involved in sending astronauts up in an old shuttle fleet. Maybe you think thats trivial, but NASA has determined that they have better uses of that money.
The government (like any business or individual) has to make what we call decisions about what to spend their budget on. Some things get funded, some don't. Deal
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
When will this stupid argument stop... "We can put a man on the moon but..."
Actually, that's a different and more valid than 'If we haven't ... yet, why are we spending money to ...'
In fact,it would appear that if we give up our bombing habit, we can likely afford to feed the poor, educate the children, research deadly diseases, AND have another space telescope.
A few hundred billion dollars goes a LONG way.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2, Informative)
Hah (Score:1, Flamebait)
Oh how I love slashdot.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
We're already seeing wonderful results from Spitzer, and Chandra has been producing valuable data for years. Their biggest deficiency has been a lack of comparable PR campaign to Hubble's. (That and XRay data doesn't make such beautiful pictures.)
Our next visible-light instrument needs to resolve objects two to four times fainter than Hubble, with finer resolution to answer the next round of big astroph
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2, Interesting)
Since W. came into office, we have stepped down the construction of the Space station that we had commited to for 20 years. Given the choice of local space or far space, I will take far space, but it does not change the fact that W. turned Reagan/Poppa Bush/Clinton's promise into being worthless (At this point, I would love to see us turn it over to Russia/Europe/China/etc and make the move for Mars/Moon). And that was befo
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
To be honest, it seems sad to me that these are the only sorts of ways in which you can imagine regular people being affected.
Tell us, what's so "awesome" about the data Hubble's provided so far, since it went live in 1990? How has it impacted your life since then (aside from giving you neat wallpapers)? How will it impact the
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:5, Insightful)
NASA and HSTSI have invested very large amounts of money and time in the HST program. Even if a new telescope was built and launched, it wouldn't make the instruments magically become 50% cheaper. With the way NASA is being funded, it may be decades before another optical telescope is put in space.
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:5, Interesting)
Additionally, how exactly do you "let the Hubble go"? Ever wonder what an enormous 2.4 meter, aerodynamic chunk of glass will do if you let its orbit decay? SOMEONE is going to get hurt, because many parts of hubble will not burn up in re-entry. To "let the Hubble go" would require another servicing mission. Might as well fix the STIS anyway, eh?
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:2)
Even better, COS (Cosmic Origins Spectrograph) should be installed, as it was going to be on SM4. I find it particularly ironic that the fact sheet on COS [nasa.gov] has this sadly prescient quote in it (my emph):
Re:It's time to let the Hubble go (Score:1)
If there was only one lawnmower in the entire world (like the Hubble) then you would spend whatever it takes to keep it working even if you could build 3 or 4 other mowers.
Keep the Hubble AND build the others. There is enough research (or lawns to mow) for both.
Slashdotted already (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted already (Score:2)
Blind? No problem (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blind? No problem (Score:4, Funny)
Or if FIFA get their hands on it, it can referee the next England match...
NeoThermic
Re:Blind? No problem - OT (Score:2)
England scored what would of been a game winning goal only for it to be dissalowed by the ref.
Basically everyone agrees that the goal should of stood, even Portugal fans, who also got hit by the same judgement from the ref in the extra time of *the same game*...
NeoThermic
Re:Blind? No problem (Score:1)
source: NY Times (all the news you should be allowed to know)
Could the extra power distort what hubble saw? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Could the extra power distort what hubble saw? (Score:4, Informative)
Sea littler (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sea littler (Score:2)
As in "fell out of a B-52 off the coast of Spain in 1966 and the USAF really wanted to have it back."
Re:Sea littler (Score:1)
There's still one off the coast of Georgia! (Score:5, Interesting)
Heard about this only recently. Google for "Georgia coast bomb", you'll find some stories, such as http://www.registerguard.com/news/2004/05/02/a5.b
It's considered more risky to retrieve than to let it lie. Might spread contamination. I'm in Jacksonville, Florida; if it went off, I might hear the boom!
Re:There's still one off the coast of Georgia! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:There's still one off the coast of Georgia! (Score:1)
Some guy wondering about the bomb, hired some salvagers and found it. It wasn't under guard from the Navy. The feds said it wasn't worth retrieving -- it'd cost $5 million. The guy offered to pick it up for $900,000 and the feds said no.
So if you want a cheap h-bomb with bomb grade uranium, you can pick it up for $900,0
Re:There's still one off the coast of Georgia! (Score:2)
Re:There's still one off the coast of Georgia! (Score:2, Interesting)
The Navy does a great job keeping out foreign vessels. There's hardly any drugs brought in that way.
I think the panicked people in Georgia have a right be be panicky about a nuke sitting in the nearby ocean. They're not worried about the Russians learning anything from it. They're worried about bo
Re:Sea littler (Score:1)
Alvin and Titanic (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:2)
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:2)
That submersible pioneered a lot of deep-sea research, to say the least.
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:1)
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:2)
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:1)
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:1)
How do you pronounce USA-nians? Or is it just one of them there interweb doohickeys like MYSQL which ain't meant to be pronounced out loud? Unlike URL which we all know is pronounced "earl".
Re:Alvin and Titanic (Score:2)
Re:That IS amazing... (Score:1)
Dumb mods (Score:2)
Maybe... (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with another poster here that we need to get a suitable replacement up ASAP, but perhaps now that Hubble is truly showing its age, the public will accept its retirement as an eventuality. After all, Skylab was a pioneering space "device" (for lack of a better term) and we let that fall back down to Earth.
I'm not saying we should necessarily write it off right now, but that maybe those folks at NASA who said six months ago that Hubble was getting near retirement age were right. Now, instead of lots of expensive repair missions, let's get a new and better 'scope up there ASAP!
p
Replacements (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Replacements (Score:5, Informative)
for the bazillionth time, Hubble is more than just pictures. Ground-based scopes are limited to optical frequencies, Hubble can see from near IR to near UV.
More importantly, though, imaging is only one small component of astronomy, it's the spectra where much of the 'real' science is done. Spectra need to be very clean, the atmosphere not only blocks certain frequencies out of optical, but adds its own absorption/emission spectra on top of that.
So basically this telescope is NOT a replacement for Hubble, no matter what they're claiming to get funding. It will complement Hubble, that's for sure, but definitely not replace.
Re:Maybe... (Score:4, Insightful)
The plan to decomission Hubble earlier this year came within days of the Bush plan to redirect NASA to explore Mars. If you really believe that the decision was based on good science and engineering, and not on political goals, then you are incredibly naive. The announcement came with only a nominal budgetary increase, so many NASA budgets were completely slashed, including the Hubble servicing mission. Several other very important missions, including the Dark Energy Probe, are now on permanent ice as well. It is not a matter of "expense," as you suggest, but rather one of priority. We have the money, but rather than devoting it to science, it is now going into the drain of a Mars mission which will never launch, because Congress will never approve the hundreds of billions required.
The NGST (now named Webb) telescope has been in the works for years. It has a launch date of 2010. The Hubble reservicing mission was planned for 2006, and should have kept Hubble in operation until at least 2011 or 2012. That WAS a rational plan to keep the HST maintained, and to ensure than we have one optical space observatory in service at all times.
--RF
Re:Maybe... (Score:1, Insightful)
Our response, should have been to ground the Shuttles entirely, ending both the HST and ISS as unfortunate side-effects of the final shutdown of the whole misbegotten Shuttle program. (We should have been getting a replacement on-line in the 1990s, but, hey, there was a budget to balance, and a space station to build as an international venture, and the best replacement candida
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
assholes like you suggesting we put even more wear-and-tear on these dangerous, antiquated experimental spacecraft so we can gather data now instead of in ten years
Why not have ISS make itself useful? There have been several proposals for an automated craft to snag HST and tow it up to ISS for repair. The parts can go upon one of the progress flights.
This is the sort of thing that is bound to come up eventually if we are ever going to have a real presence in space. Might as well develop the tugboat n
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Secondly, STIS is used in about 30% of Hubble scheduling. So this means that 70% of science can still be done even if STIS comes back online.
As for putting a better scope up there ASAP, that ain't go
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Secondly, STIS is used in about 30% of Hubble scheduling. So this means that 70% of science can still be done
Only if there is a one-to-one correspondence between "time spent" and "science done". That seems highly unlikely.
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
1 - that ratio is pretty much one to one
2 - to get time on hubble requires a pretty rigourous review of merit.
You seem to be implying that (2) logically leads to (1). I don't see that. The way I see it, (2) only guarantees a minimum level of merit, not that all uses are exactly the same level of merit.
Re:Maybe... (Score:3, Informative)
After all, Skylab was a pioneering space "device" (for lack of a better term) and we let that fall back down to Earth.
We didn't "let" Skylab fall back to Earth, unless you consider orbital decay about 18 months early and a delayed space shuttle that was to push it back up letting.
More info on the STIS failure on Hubble (Score:3, Informative)
Geez guys, pay attention! (Score:5, Informative)
We're still going to get nice pretty pictures out of Hubble, just no UV/wavelength pictures
Hubble's hobbled, but still alive and kicking.
ACS grism still works! (Score:5, Informative)
Linkage [esa.int]
*sigh* (Score:1)
Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:5, Interesting)
Today, the romance of the ocean is dead. You can work on a containership or an oil rig, but nobody dreams of a career as an "aquanaut". Jacques Costeau seems dated.
Re:Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:1)
Maybe you don't hear about it as much, but it's still there! I heard an interview with some folks at Wood's Hole regarding Alvin's retirement (which they view as a logical step towards an upgrade, not necessarily a loss) and they sounded pretty fired up about it. And let's not forget these folks [wired.com], who are finding all kinds of cool stuff.
I think it's a little less exciting now because it requires more infrastructure to do anything new. Unlike the days when you
Re:Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:3, Informative)
The romance of the ocean isn't dead. If anything, it's just starting. In someways it was a little unfair to put these two articles together, since the implication for Alvin was all wrong. It's not being decommissioned, they have just announced plans to replace it.
Woods hole, the makers of Alvin, are buliding a new a sub that can go about 5,000ft deeper, which means that crews can access 99% of the ocean floor as opposed to ~68% they have accessable with Alvin. They are also building a ROV that descend
Re:Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:2)
Get this man some food! He's starting to hallucinate. After you've plumbed the depths of your spaghetti sauce [m-w.com], read about the Marianas trench [bartleby.com].
</smartass>
But seriously, good post. +1, Informative, as well as +1, Funny.
Re:Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:2)
The old romance isn't dead. Go check out some of the online sailing(here [latitude38.com]) and SCUBA communities(here [scubaboard.com]) to find some.
Re:Alvin and the romance of oceanography (Score:5, Interesting)
Today, the romance of space is dead. You can work the shuttle or in NASA, but almost nobody dreams of a career as an "astronaut".
Unfortunately, after the edits it's still pretty much true.
Mod +1 tragic.
Aren't there other instruments on board Hubble? (Score:2)
Re:Aren't there other instruments on board Hubble? (Score:3, Interesting)
"The highly probable consequence of this scenario is the total failure of the MEB/Support Electronics +5V power converter. Since this component is essential to the operation of all of the 8 mechanisms within the instrument (including shutters), its demise renders those mechanisms inoperable. A re-configuration to the Side 1 electronics (current operations are on Side 2) is not possible. (The Side 1 electronics failed in May 2001.)"
my enphasis.
Re:Aren't there other instruments on board Hubble? (Score:2)
Basically, the spectrometer is toast, but there's still other instruments that are just fine. Unfortunately the one that failed was one of the more useful ones.
MadCow.
Re:Aren't there other instruments on board Hubble? (Score:2, Informative)
Briefly, there's ACS (Advanced Camera for Surveys), which does both optical and UV imaging; WFPC2 (Wide Field Planetary Camera 2), the older UV/optical
OOOVERLOOAD (Score:1)
Actually, the word "overload" is kind of overloaded on subtley different definitions too.
Re:OOOVERLOOAD (Score:1)
I for one welcome our acronym overloads.
no one can hear you scream (Score:2)
robotics for space and sea!!!!! (Score:1)
2. Why not put HST and International Space Station together? Compromise orbit.
3. Why not send robots to the bottom of the sea?
4. Why not send robots to our moon and Mars?
5. Why do physical humans have to do everything?
Give the automatons a chance at the actions
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Re:robotics for space and sea!!!!! (Score:1)
Obligatory Beatles reference (Score:1)
Mod me off topic, but... (Score:2)
How about everyone around the world move beyond "the first" and instead focus on being "the best"? Exploration, at least for our species, has always depended on competition. Competition, however, obviously does not depend on a series of "fi
Why not replace hubble (Score:2)
And the instruments currently constructed to replace the ones up there now.
Hunter S Thompson is blind? (Score:2)
"acryonym"? (Score:2)
Do you mean acronym [reference.com], which please note is derived from the Greek: acro [head] and nym [word]. Opposing views beow, there is no requirement that this acro-nym be pronounceable as a normal word, this is a restriction imosed very much in recent times.
Re:"acryonym"? (Score:1)