Atlantis Crew Installs New Gyroscopes on Hubble
The second of five scheduled spacewalks to repair and upgrade the 19-year-old Hubble goes well but behind schedule as astronauts struggle to properly seat a box of gyroscopes.
It didn't happen easily, but the
space shuttle Atlantis' astronauts installed new gyroscopes May 15 on
the Hubble Space Telescope. Working in extremely tight quarters inside
the Hubble, the spacewalking crew encountered a box of gyros that
wouldn't align properly but successfully installed a different set.
The
bulky gyroscope box delayed the timetable for the primary goal of
flight day five of the 11-day mission by more than a hour. Once the
gyroscopes were in place, the astronauts carefully maneuvered out of the
Hubble and began installing new batteries on the telescope. It was the
second of five scheduled spacewalks for the crew.
The Hubble's six gyroscopes are part of the system that points the
telescope. When all six gyroscopes are functioning, three gyroscopes
are used for pointing, and the other three are held in reserve. Time
has degraded the gyroscopes to the point where three have failed, two
are in use, and a third is turned off to be used as an emergency
backup. Astronauts Mike Massimino and Michael Good replaced all of the gyroscopes.
Hubble's
batteries, which charge from solar panels during daylight and discharge
at night, have worked flawlessly in the 19-year history of Hubble, but
NASA decided to install new ones, particularly since this is the
shuttle's final mission to the Hubble. The repairs and upgrades should
keep the Hubble operational until at least 2014.
On the
first spacewalk May 14, Atlantis mission specialists John Grunsfeld and
Drew Feustel replaced Hubble's Science Instrument Command and Data
Handling Unit, the computer that sends commands to
Hubble's science instruments and formats science data for transmission
to the ground. The two also removed the Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 and replaced it with a new wide-field camera,
allowing the Hubble to take large-scale,
extremely clear and detailed pictures over a very wide range of colors.
Like the gyroscopes, NASA had a few anxious minutes when Grunsfeld and Feustel couldn't get a bolt attaching the Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 to budge. Finally, Fuestel muscled it loose, much to the relief of NASA, which had spent $132 million on the new Wide Field Camera 3.
Over the weekend, astronauts will install the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, an instrument that breaks light into its component
colors, revealing information about the object emitting the light. COS
sees exclusively in ultraviolet light and will improve Hubble's
ultraviolet sensitivity at least 10 times, and up to 70 times when
observing extremely faint objects.









