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With the public outraged over the abandonment of Hubble, NASA considered the idea of sending up a robot to replace the batteries and gyroscopes, plug in the latest wide-field camera, and perform some other jobs. But the robot plan never jelled, and the NASA administrator at the time, Michael Griffin, nixed it. Instead, Griffin approved one last Hubble tuneup by astronauts. He left NASA in January with the change in the White House. Grunsfeld disagreed about the robot mission. "I have absolutely no doubt it would have worked," Grunsfeld told The Associated Press. "I do think that we got a little too greedy and tried to propose that (a Hubble robot mission) would do a lot more than it really could." Grunsfeld is quick to note that no robot could have tackled some chores they'll undertake
-- installing the new cosmic origins spectrograph for detecting faint light from faraway quasars and repairing two failed science instruments. The spacewalkers will have to undo 117 fasteners to get to a bad electronics board inside an old imaging spectrograph, and deal with a hard-to-get-around corner to replace burned-out power supply cards in an advanced camera for surveys. "It's right at the edge of what I think people can do, period," Grunsfeld said of the repairs. In addition to all that, the astronauts will put in a new fine guidance sensor, part of Hubble's pointing system, add some steel skin to the telescope's blistered exterior. And they will hook up an improved capture ring so a future robot-guided craft can latch onto the Hubble and steer the observatory into a Pacific grave sometime in the early 2020s. "I think of Hubble as a roller coaster," Weiler said late last month, referring to all its ups and downs. But the bottom line is, "Everybody loves Hubble now." It's even won over the Twittering crowd. Astronaut Michael Massimino has been filing training updates via Twitter for the past month; he hopes to post from orbit, but is uncertain whether he'll have time. Before tragedy struck with Columbia, Weiler envisioned a space shuttle bringing Hubble back to Earth and the telescope
-- "the great American comeback story" -- being displayed at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum. He imagined "little school kids going up to this huge four-story telescope and being able to say,
'That's what filled your textbook with pictures and traveled billions of miles in orbit.' " Instead, the world will eventually watch as Hubble plunges from the sky. Grunsfeld -- who will have spent more time working on Hubble in space than any other human
-- said he will have no remorse when it comes time to leave the telescope near the end of the 11-day shuttle mission. "The increase in Hubble's capability and the life extension is going to be so phenomenal that I'm just going to be thrilled to see it as it recedes onto the horizon as just another bright star," he said. He's already planning a huge party for when Hubble plummets out of the sky in another decade or so, on a cruise ship somewhere in the Pacific. ___ On the Net: NASA: http://tinyurl.com/d3rqj7 Space Telescope Science Institute:
http://www.stsci.edu/hst/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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