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NASA To Repair Hubble By Remote Control

Matt_dk writes "NASA says it plans to fix the Hubble Space Telescope by remote control this week. The Hubble stopped beaming information to Earth about two weeks ago, when a data unit on the telescope completely failed. Scientists on Tuesday said they will bypass the failed unit and switch to a back-up system to restart the flow of information. The computer glitch forced NASA to postpone a shuttle mission this month to repair the Hubble. That shuttle mission has been postponed until next year." Update - 10/15, 17:45 by SS: Readers have pointed out further details from Spaceflight Now and the NASA press release.

2 of 53 comments (clear)

  1. So, a better summary... by txoof · · Score: 4, Insightful

    NASA will flip a switch and kick in the backup system.

    The story is pretty light on details. It reads like a 6th grader wrote it.

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    1. Re:So, a better summary... by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because the point is to avoid catastrophic failure. Imagine it was something like say a solar flare, backup systems online and poof goes the backups too. Or there is some form of short circuit that'll fry the backups too. Or just figuring out what the failure state is and how to best handle it. To take an example, say a Mars rover wheel is busted. How? Is it stuck? Has it lost the drive? Can it turn? Is the wheel itself torn? Is it just a sensor malfunction? You need to be 100% sure what state Hubble was in when it failed in order to be sure to recover properly. On earth it's really easy to throw a lot of real redundancy into things, in space it's still one device more or less and you try to figure out if the right side is safe when the left side is on fire. Most anywhere else it's either functioning correctly or you'd kill it and replace it with something that does. Trying to salvage half-borked systems only happens when they're really expensive or really hard to reach, and I think the Hubble qualifies on both.

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