Times-Herald

Computer trouble hits Hubble Space Telescope, science halted

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The Hubble Space Telescope has been hit with computer trouble, with all astronomic­al viewing halted, NASA said Wednesday.

The orbiting observator­y has been idle since Sunday when a 1980s-era computer that controls the science instrument­s shut down, possibly because of a bad memory board.

Flight controller­s at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland tried to restart the computer Monday, but the same thing happened. They're now trying to switch to a backup memory unit. If that works, the telescope will be tested for a day, before the science instrument­s are turned back on and observatio­ns can resume.

For now, the cameras and other instrument­s are in a socalled safe mode.

Launched in 1990, Hubble is showing more and more signs of aging, despite a series of repairs and updates by spacewalki­ng astronauts during NASA's shuttle era. The idled computer was installed during the fifth and final service call in 2009.

NASA plans to launch Hubble's successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, in November. This observator­y will be too far from Earth — 1 million miles away in a solar orbit — for astronaut tune-ups.

The launch from French Guiana using Europe's Ariane rocket is years behind schedule; the latest delay of two weeks is the result of rocket processing and scheduling issues.

Scientists hope to have an overlap in orbit between Hubble and the considerab­ly more advanced and powerful Webb.

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