Hubble Turns 10
frinsore writes "Hubble turns 10! Seems like just yesterday that there was a flaw in the mirror, and it couldn't see. Now it's seen black holes, birth of stars, shoemaker-levy and the surface of Pluto. NASA can come back from mistakes." Not only that, but it survived a crash with the Satellite of Love in Mystery Science Theater 3000 : The Movie. Update: 04/25 01:30 by E : Hey, check out HubbleSite, too.
I think the whole Hubble story could serve as a dose of realism for some of the extreme NASA-naysayers. Space exploration (be it hubble or that unlucky Mars robot thing) is difficult and expensive Put the two together, and you've got the possibility of failure.
We shouldn't be surprised that cutting edge technology fails on its way to another planet once in awhile. It would be downright freaky if every NASA project worked perfectly, on time and underbudget.
---
Dammit, my mom is not a Karma whore!
Oh, sure, you might say that it doesn't matter what we do to aliens; that it's them, not us. But remember, a violation of anyone's privacy hurts us all. We never how soon it will be before Uncle Sam decides to turn his giant eye towards the Earth. The next thing you know, pictures of you, your family, and your house are being downloaded into NASA's computers. Echelon is nothing compared to the horrific spying power of this insidious machine.
Dismantle the Hubble Space Telescope -- because space aliens have rights too!
Yu Suzuki
Yu Suzuki
Deamcast. It's thinking.
Have you ever noticed how when NASA gets in a funk, it's always the Hubble Telescope that saves the day? I mean, think about it, the first real important mission after the Challenger accident was the launch of the telescope. When the telescope was defective, NASA used it to show just how expertly astronauts can work in outer space (can we say 'space station' anyone?). NASA gets in a bit of trouble with the Mars missions and, whoa, Hubble turns ten (and re-releases some pretty pictures to boot). Hubble has done a wonderful job of generating PR for NASA. In fact, tonight on ABC World News, I saw a report on how the only pictures scientists ever release from Hubble are the really pretty one (they have a gallery at their web site, although I haven't checked it out yet).
.. or woman .. but not person).
Hubble's a PR machine, especially when you consider that the real brunt work is done by other space telescopes like Chandra. In fact, Hubble gets the most attention because its imagery is the most 'real' to the layman (read: Congressman
So here's to ten more years of Hubble. Hopefully, it can keep NASA around long enough for it to get the next big PR booster it needs, the space station.
I guess my point is this: sure, there are areas Hubble will never be able to probe, questions it will never be able to answer, pictures it will never be able to take. And other satellites have been designed to probe those areas, answer those questions, take those pictures. But Hubble has done what it was *designed* to do, extremely well. We'll all be sorry when it's gone. ;-)
Just my 2 cents.
If you go and read "the cuckoo's egg" by Cliff Stoll, find the part where he mentions the cracker is looking for something called KeyHole 11.
The NSA guy goes pale when he hears that. Cliff asks him what it means, and the guy says that KH11 is the same as the Hubble, only it points at the earth. Cliff does the math for what the optical properties would be (badly, he later admitted, because he didn't take into account adaptive optics and a dozen other well known tricks), and comes up with the resolution for what a Hubble sized telescope could see on the ground, 8-15 cms.
Over on sci.military and alt.conspiracy the story maintains that in the 60's, the NRO had brought in some astronomers to create a telescope that could spy on the earth with great precision. The astronomers created at least 12 of them, each bigger and better than the last. But the optics and communications packages were made for looking downwards, and the astronomers were dying to point it at stars. They carefully leaked a lot of the design specs to others starting in the 70's. This got turned into congressional funding, and eventually the single Hubble was created. Rumour has it the hubble and keyhole satellites share an almost identical design, only the sensor packages and civilian communication packages are different.
the AC
Hemos is like...sci-fi fans;he thinks technology is cool, but he hasn't bothered to understand the science it's based on