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Sun, Oct 19, 2008

NASA: No Quick Fixes For Hubble Trouble

Two More Glitches Surface While Starting Up Backup System

The National Space and Aeronautics Administration's latest efforts to return the Hubble Space Telescope to functionality were thwarted Thursday by two malfunctions encountered in an attempt to restart observation components through backup systems.

The latest problems involve a low voltage power supply to one of Hubble's cameras and a glitch in an onboard computer.

The Associated Press reports the soonest Hubble could be operating fully again is late this week. Art Whipple, a Hubble manager, said at worst, the observatory might remain inactive until astronauts arrive with replacement parts on the next Shuttle mission, scheduled for February 2009.

"We're still optimistic," he told reporters Friday.

NASA said that on Wednesday, October 14, engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center reconfigured six components of the Hubble Data Management System and five components in the Science Instrument Command and Data Handling (SIC &DH) system to use their redundant (or B) sides.

This was done to work around a failure that occurred on September 27 in the Side A Science Data Formatter in the SIC&DH and resulted in the cessation of all science observations except for astrometry with the Fine Guidance Sensors.

The reconfiguration proceeded nominally and Hubble resumed the science timeline at Noon ET on Thursday, October 16. The first activities out of that on-board science timeline were the commanding of the science instruments from their safe to operate modes.

This occurred nominally for Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 and the Near Infrared Camera and Multi Object Spectrometer. However, an anomaly occurred during the last steps of the commanding to the Advanced Camera for Surveys.

At 1:40 pm, when the low voltage power supply to the ACS Solar Blind Channel was commanded on, software running in a microprocessor in ACS detected an incorrect voltage level in the Solar Blind Channel and suspended ACS.

Then at 5:14 pm, the Hubble spacecraft computer sensed the loss of a "keep alive" signal from the NASA Standard Spacecraft Computer in the SIC&DH and correctly responded by "safing" the NSSC-I and the science instruments. It is not yet known if these two events were related.

The investigation into both anomalies is underway. All data has been collected and is being analyzed. "We're in the early stage of going through a mountain of data that has been downloaded over the last 24 hours," Whipple said.

The science instruments will remain in safe mode until the NSSC-I issue is resolved. All other subsystems on the spacecraft are performing nominally and astrometry observations continue.

FMI: www.nasa.gov/hubble

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