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Hubble Space Telescope

The Hubble Space Telescope (often referred to as HST or Hubble) is a space telescope that was launched into low Earth orbit in 1990 and remains in operation. It was not the first space telescope, but it is one of the largest and most versatile, renowned both as a vital research tool and as a public relations boon for astronomy. The Hubble telescope is named after astronomer Edwin Hubble and is one of NASA's Great Observatories. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) selects Hubble's targets and processes the resulting data, while the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) controls the spacecraft.[8]

Hubble Space Telescope
Seen in orbit from the departing Space Shuttle Atlantis in 2009, flying Servicing Mission 4 (STS-125), the fifth and final Hubble mission.
NamesHST
Hubble
Mission typeAstronomy
OperatorSTScI
COSPAR ID1990-037B
SATCAT no.20580
Websitenasa.gov/hubble
hubblesite.org
spacetelescope.org
Mission duration32 years, 9 months and 21 days (ongoing)[1]
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerLockheed Martin (spacecraft)
Perkin-Elmer (optics)
Launch mass11,110 kg (24,490 lb)[2]
Dimensions13.2 m × 4.2 m (43 ft × 14 ft)[2]
Power2,800 watts
Start of mission
Launch dateApril 24, 1990, 12:33:51 UTC[3]
RocketSpace Shuttle Discovery (STS-31)
Launch siteKennedy, LC-39B
ContractorRockwell International
Deployment dateApril 25, 1990[2]
Entered serviceMay 20, 1990[2]
End of mission
Decay date2030–2040 (estimated)[4]
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric orbit[5]
RegimeLow Earth orbit
Periapsis altitude537.0 km (333.7 mi)
Apoapsis altitude540.9 km (336.1 mi)
Inclination28.47°
Period95.42 minutes
Main telescope
TypeRitchey–Chrétien reflector
Diameter2.4 m (7 ft 10 in)[6]
Focal length57.6 m (189 ft)[6]
Focal ratiof/24
Collecting area4.0 m2 (43 sq ft)[7]
WavelengthsNear-infrared, visible light, ultraviolet
Instruments
NICMOSNear Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer
ACSAdvanced Camera for Surveys
WFC3Wide Field Camera 3
COSCosmic Origins Spectrograph
STISSpace Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
FGSFine Guidance Sensor
 

Hubble features a 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) mirror, and its five main instruments observe in the ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. Hubble's orbit outside the distortion of Earth's atmosphere allows it to capture extremely high-resolution images with substantially lower background light than ground-based telescopes. It has recorded some of the most detailed visible light images, allowing a deep view into space. Many Hubble observations have led to breakthroughs in astrophysics, such as determining the rate of expansion of the universe.

Space telescopes were proposed as early as 1923, and the Hubble telescope was funded and built in the 1970s by the United States space agency NASA with contributions from the European Space Agency. Its intended launch was in 1983, but the project was beset by technical delays, budget problems, and the 1986 Challenger disaster. Hubble was finally launched in 1990, but its main mirror had been ground incorrectly, resulting in spherical aberration that compromised the telescope's capabilities. The optics were corrected to their intended quality by a servicing mission in 1993.

Hubble is the only telescope designed to be maintained in space by astronauts. Five Space Shuttle missions have repaired, upgraded, and replaced systems on the telescope, including all five of the main instruments. The fifth mission was initially canceled on safety grounds following the Columbia disaster (2003), but after NASA administrator Michael D. Griffin approved it, the HST was completed in 2009. It completed 30 years of operation in April 2020[1] and is predicted to last until 2030–2040.[4]

Hubble forms the visible light component of NASA's Great Observatories program, along with the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the Spitzer Space Telescope (which covers the infrared bands).[9] The mid-IR-to-visible band successor to the Hubble telescope is the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which was launched on December 25, 2021, with the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope due to follow in 2027.[10][11][12]

Conception, design and aim

Proposals and precursors

 
Astronaut Owen Garriott working next to Skylab's crewed solar space observatory, 1973.

In 1923, Hermann Oberth—considered a father of modern rocketry, along with Robert H. Goddard and Konstantin Tsiolkovsky—published Die Rakete zu den Planetenräumen ("The Rocket into Planetary Space"), which mentioned how a telescope could be propelled into Earth orbit by a rocket.[13]

 
Lyman Spitzer played a major role in the birth of the Hubble Space Telescope project.

The history of the Hubble Space Telescope can be traced back as far as 1946, to astronomer Lyman Spitzer's paper entitled "Astronomical advantages of an extraterrestrial observatory".[14] In it, he discussed the two main advantages that a space-based observatory would have over ground-based telescopes. First, the angular resolution (the smallest separation at which objects can be clearly distinguished) would be limited only by diffraction, rather than by the turbulence in the atmosphere, which causes stars to twinkle, known to astronomers as seeing. At that time ground-based telescopes were limited to resolutions of 0.5–1.0 arcseconds, compared to a theoretical diffraction-limited resolution of about 0.05 arcsec for an optical telescope with a mirror 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) in diameter. Second, a space-based telescope could observe infrared and ultraviolet light, which are strongly absorbed by the atmosphere of Earth.[14]

Spitzer devoted much of his career to pushing for the development of a space telescope.[15] In 1962, a report by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences recommended development of a space telescope as part of the space program, and in 1965, Spitzer was appointed as head of a committee given the task of defining scientific objectives for a large space telescope.[16]

 
Dr. Nancy Grace Roman with a model of the Large Space Telescope that was eventually developed as the Hubble Space Telescope. While listed as a 1966 photo, this design was not the standard until the mid-1970s.

Also crucial was the work of Nancy Grace Roman, the "Mother of Hubble".[17] Well before it became an official NASA project, she gave public lectures touting the scientific value of the telescope. After it was approved, she became the program scientist, setting up the steering committee in charge of making astronomer needs feasible to implement[18] and writing testimony to Congress throughout the 1970s to advocate continued funding of the telescope.[19] Her work as project scientist helped set the standards for NASA's operation of large scientific projects.[20]

Space-based astronomy had begun on a very small scale following World War II, as scientists made use of developments that had taken place in rocket technology. The first ultraviolet spectrum of the Sun was obtained in 1946,[21] and the NASA launched the Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO) to obtain UV, X-ray, and gamma-ray spectra in 1962.[22] An orbiting solar telescope was launched in 1962 by the United Kingdom as part of the Ariel programme, and in 1966 NASA launched the first Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO) mission. OAO-1's battery failed after three days, terminating the mission. It was followed by Orbiting Astronomical Observatory 2 (OAO-2), which carried out ultraviolet observations of stars and galaxies from its launch in 1968 until 1972, well beyond its original planned lifetime of one year.[23]

The OSO and OAO missions demonstrated the important role space-based observations could play in astronomy. In 1968, NASA developed firm plans for a space-based reflecting telescope with a mirror 3 m (9.8 ft) in diameter, known provisionally as the Large Orbiting Telescope or Large Space Telescope (LST), with a launch slated for 1979. These plans emphasized the need for crewed maintenance missions to the telescope to ensure such a costly program had a lengthy working life, and the concurrent development of plans for the reusable Space Shuttle indicated that the technology to allow this was soon to become available.[24]

Quest for funding

The continuing success of the OAO program encouraged increasingly strong consensus within the astronomical community that the LST should be a major goal. In 1970, NASA established two committees, one to plan the engineering side of the space telescope project, and the other to determine the scientific goals of the mission. Once these had been established, the next hurdle for NASA was to obtain funding for the instrument, which would be far more costly than any Earth-based telescope. The U.S. Congress questioned many aspects of the proposed budget for the telescope and forced cuts in the budget for the planning stages, which at the time consisted of very detailed studies of potential instruments and hardware for the telescope. In 1974, public spending cuts led to Congress deleting all funding for the telescope project.[25]

In 1977, then NASA Administrator James C. Fletcher proposed a token $5 million for Hubble in NASA's budget. Then NASA Associate Administrator for Space Science, Noel Hinners, instead cut all funding for Hubble, gambling that this would galvanize the scientific community into fighting for full funding. As Hinners recalls:[26]

It was clear that year that we weren’t going to be able to get a full-up start. There was some opposition on [Capitol] Hill to getting a new start on [Hubble]. It was driven, in large part as I recall, by the budget situation. Jim Fletcher proposed that we put in $5 million as a placeholder. I didn’t like that idea. It was, in today’s vernacular, a "sop" to the astronomy community. "There's something in there, so all is well".

I figured in my own little head that to get that community energized we’d be better off zeroing it out. Then they would say, "Whoa, we’re in deep trouble", and it would marshal the troops. So I advocated that we not put anything in. I don’t remember any of the detailed discussions or whether there were any, but Jim went along with that so we zeroed it out. It had, from my perspective, the desired impact of stimulating the astronomy community to renew their efforts on the lobbying front. While I like to think in hindsight it was a brilliant political move, I’m not sure I thought it through all that well. It was something that was spur of the moment.

[...] $5 million would let them think that all is well anyway, but it’s not. So let’s give them a message. My own thinking, get them stimulated to get into action. Zeroing it out would certainly give that message. I think it was as simple as that. Didn’t talk to anybody else about doing it first, just, "Let’s go do that". Voila, it worked. Don’t know whether I’d do that again.

The political ploy worked. In response to Hubble being zeroed out of NASA's budget, a nationwide lobbying effort was coordinated among astronomers. Many astronomers met congressmen and senators in person, and large-scale letter-writing campaigns were organized. The National Academy of Sciences published a report emphasizing the need for a space telescope, and eventually, the Senate agreed to half the budget that had originally been approved by Congress.[27]

The funding issues led to something of a reduction in the scale of the project, with the proposed mirror diameter reduced from 3 m to 2.4 m, both to cut costs[28] and to allow a more compact and effective configuration for the telescope hardware. A proposed precursor 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) space telescope to test the systems to be used on the main satellite was dropped, and budgetary concerns also prompted collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA). ESA agreed to provide funding and supply one of the first generation instruments for the telescope, as well as the solar cells that would power it, and staff to work on the telescope in the United States, in return for European astronomers being guaranteed at least 15% of the observing time on the telescope.[29] Congress eventually approved funding of US$36 million for 1978, and the design of the LST began in earnest, aiming for a launch date of 1983.[27] In 1983, the telescope was named after Edwin Hubble,[30] who confirmed one of the greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th century, made by Georges Lemaître, that the universe is expanding.[31]

Construction and engineering

 
Grinding of Hubble's primary mirror at Perkin-Elmer, March 1979.

Once the Space Telescope project had been given the go-ahead, work on the program was divided among many institutions. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) was given responsibility for the design, development, and construction of the telescope, while Goddard Space Flight Center was given overall control of the scientific instruments and ground-control center for the mission.[32] MSFC commissioned the optics company Perkin-Elmer to design and build the optical tube assembly (OTA) and Fine Guidance Sensors for the space telescope. Lockheed was commissioned to construct and integrate the spacecraft in which the telescope would be housed.[33]

Optical tube assembly

Optically, the HST is a Cassegrain reflector of Ritchey–Chrétien design, as are most large professional telescopes. This design, with two hyperbolic mirrors, is known for good imaging performance over a wide field of view, with the disadvantage that the mirrors have shapes that are hard to fabricate and test. The mirror and optical systems of the telescope determine the final performance, and they were designed to exacting specifications. Optical telescopes typically have mirrors polished to an accuracy of about a tenth of the wavelength of visible light, but the Space Telescope was to be used for observations from the visible through the ultraviolet (shorter wavelengths) and was specified to be diffraction limited to take full advantage of the space environment. Therefore, its mirror needed to be polished to an accuracy of 10 nanometers, or about 1/65 of the wavelength of red light.[34] On the long wavelength end, the OTA was not designed with optimum IR performance in mind—for example, the mirrors are kept at stable (and warm, about 15 °C) temperatures by heaters. This limits Hubble's performance as an infrared telescope.[35]

 
The backup mirror, by Kodak. Its inner support structure can be seen because it is not coated with a reflective surface.

Perkin-Elmer intended to use custom-built and extremely sophisticated computer-controlled polishing machines to grind the mirror to the required shape.[33] However, in case their cutting-edge technology ran into difficulties, NASA demanded that PE sub-contract to Kodak to construct a back-up mirror using traditional mirror-polishing techniques.[36] (The team of Kodak and Itek also bid on the original mirror polishing work. Their bid called for the two companies to double-check each other's work, which would have almost certainly caught the polishing error that later caused such problems.)[37] The Kodak mirror is now on permanent display at the National Air and Space Museum.[38][39] An Itek mirror built as part of the effort is now used in the 2.4 m telescope at the Magdalena Ridge Observatory.[40]

Construction of the Perkin-Elmer mirror began in 1979, starting with a blank manufactured by Corning from their ultra-low expansion glass. To keep the mirror's weight to a minimum it consisted of top and bottom plates, each 25 mm (0.98 in) thick, sandwiching a honeycomb lattice. Perkin-Elmer simulated microgravity by supporting the mirror from the back with 130 rods that exerted varying amounts of force.[41] This ensured the mirror's final shape would be correct and to specification when finally deployed. Mirror polishing continued until May 1981. NASA reports at the time questioned Perkin-Elmer's managerial structure, and the polishing began to slip behind schedule and over budget. To save money, NASA halted work on the back-up mirror and put the launch date of the telescope back to October 1984.[42] The mirror was completed by the end of 1981; it was washed using 9,100 L (2,000 imp gal; 2,400 US gal) of hot, deionized water and then received a reflective coating of 65 nm-thick aluminum and a protective coating of 25 nm-thick magnesium fluoride.[35][43]

 
The OTA, metering truss, and secondary baffle are visible in this image of Hubble during early construction.

Doubts continued to be expressed about Perkin-Elmer's competence on a project of this importance, as their budget and timescale for producing the rest of the OTA continued to inflate. In response to a schedule described as "unsettled and changing daily", NASA postponed the launch date of the telescope until April 1985. Perkin-Elmer's schedules continued to slip at a rate of about one month per quarter, and at times delays reached one day for each day of work. NASA was forced to postpone the launch date until March and then September 1986. By this time, the total project budget had risen to US$1.175 billion.[44]

Spacecraft systems

The spacecraft in which the telescope and instruments were to be housed was another major engineering challenge. It would have to withstand frequent passages from direct sunlight into the darkness of Earth's shadow, which would cause major changes in temperature, while being stable enough to allow extremely accurate pointing of the telescope. A shroud of multi-layer insulation keeps the temperature within the telescope stable and surrounds a light aluminum shell in which the telescope and instruments sit. Within the shell, a graphite-epoxy frame keeps the working parts of the telescope firmly aligned.[45] Because graphite composites are hygroscopic, there was a risk that water vapor absorbed by the truss while in Lockheed's clean room would later be expressed in the vacuum of space; resulting in the telescope's instruments being covered by ice. To reduce that risk, a nitrogen gas purge was performed before launching the telescope into space.[46]

While construction of the spacecraft in which the telescope and instruments would be housed proceeded somewhat more smoothly than the construction of the OTA, Lockheed still experienced some budget and schedule slippage, and by the summer of 1985, construction of the spacecraft was 30% over budget and three months behind schedule. An MSFC report said Lockheed tended to rely on NASA directions rather than take their own initiative in the construction.[47]

Computer systems and data processing

 
DF-224 in Hubble, before it was replaced in 1999.

The two initial, primary computers on the HST were the 1.25 MHz DF-224 system, built by Rockwell Autonetics, which contained three redundant CPUs, and two redundant NSSC-1 (NASA Standard Spacecraft Computer, Model 1) systems, developed by Westinghouse and GSFC using diode–transistor logic (DTL). A co-processor for the DF-224 was added during Servicing Mission 1 in 1993, which consisted of two redundant strings of an Intel-based 80386 processor with an 80387 math co-processor.[48] The DF-224 and its 386 co-processor were replaced by a 25 MHz Intel-based 80486 processor system during Servicing Mission 3A in 1999.[49] The new computer is 20 times faster, with six times more memory, than the DF-224 it replaced. It increases throughput by moving some computing tasks from the ground to the spacecraft and saves money by allowing the use of modern programming languages.[50]

Additionally, some of the science instruments and components had their own embedded microprocessor-based control systems. The MATs (Multiple Access Transponder) components, MAT-1 and MAT-2, utilize Hughes Aircraft CDP1802CD microprocessors.[51] The Wide Field and Planetary Camera (WFPC) also utilized an RCA 1802 microprocessor (or possibly the older 1801 version).[52] The WFPC-1 was replaced by the WFPC-2 during Servicing Mission 1 in 1993, which was then replaced by the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) during Servicing Mission 4 in 2009. The upgrade extended Hubble's capability of seeing deeper into the universe and providing images in three broad regions of the spectrum.[53][54]

Initial instruments

 
Exploded view of the Hubble Space Telescope

When launched, the HST carried five scientific instruments: the Wide Field and Planetary Camera (WF/PC), Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph (GHRS), High Speed Photometer (HSP), Faint Object Camera (FOC) and the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS). WF/PC used a radial instrument bay, and the other 4 instruments were each installed in an axial instrument bay.[55]

WF/PC was a high-resolution imaging device primarily intended for optical observations. It was built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and incorporated a set of 48 filters isolating spectral lines of particular astrophysical interest. The instrument contained eight charge-coupled device (CCD) chips divided between two cameras, each using four CCDs. Each CCD has a resolution of 0.64 megapixels.[56] The wide field camera (WFC) covered a large angular field at the expense of resolution, while the planetary camera (PC) took images at a longer effective focal length than the WF chips, giving it a greater magnification.[55]

The Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph (GHRS) was a spectrograph designed to operate in the ultraviolet. It was built by the Goddard Space Flight Center and could achieve a spectral resolution of 90,000.[57] Also optimized for ultraviolet observations were the FOC and FOS, which were capable of the highest spatial resolution of any instruments on Hubble. Rather than CCDs, these three instruments used photon-counting digicons as their detectors. The FOC was constructed by ESA, while the University of California, San Diego, and Martin Marietta Corporation built the FOS.[55]

The final instrument was the HSP, designed and built at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It was optimized for visible and ultraviolet light observations of variable stars and other astronomical objects varying in brightness. It could take up to 100,000 measurements per second with a photometric accuracy of about 2% or better.[58]

HST's guidance system can also be used as a scientific instrument. Its three Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS) are primarily used to keep the telescope accurately pointed during an observation, but can also be used to carry out extremely accurate astrometry; measurements accurate to within 0.0003 arcseconds have been achieved.[59]

Ground support

 
Hubble Control Center at Goddard Space Flight Center, 1999

The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) is responsible for the scientific operation of the telescope and the delivery of data products to astronomers. STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) and is physically located in Baltimore, Maryland on the Homewood campus of Johns Hopkins University, one of the 39 U.S. universities and seven international affiliates that make up the AURA consortium. STScI was established in 1981[60][61] after something of a power struggle between NASA and the scientific community at large. NASA had wanted to keep this function in-house, but scientists wanted it to be based in an academic establishment.[62][63] The Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility (ST-ECF), established at Garching bei München near Munich in 1984, provided similar support for European astronomers until 2011, when these activities were moved to the European Space Astronomy Centre.[64]

One rather complex task that falls to STScI is scheduling observations for the telescope.[65] Hubble is in a low-Earth orbit to enable servicing missions, but this means most astronomical targets are occulted by the Earth for slightly less than half of each orbit. Observations cannot take place when the telescope passes through the South Atlantic Anomaly due to elevated radiation levels, and there are also sizable exclusion zones around the Sun (precluding observations of Mercury), Moon and Earth. The solar avoidance angle is about 50°, to keep sunlight from illuminating any part of the OTA. Earth and Moon avoidance keeps bright light out of the FGSs, and keeps scattered light from entering the instruments. If the FGSs are turned off, the Moon and Earth can be observed. Earth observations were used very early in the program to generate flat-fields for the WFPC1 instrument. There is a so-called continuous viewing zone (CVZ), within roughly 24° of Hubble's orbital poles, in which targets are not occulted for long periods.[66][67][68]

 
Hubble's low orbit means many targets are visible for slightly more than half of an orbit's elapsed time, since they are blocked from view by the Earth for almost one-half of each orbit.
 
Animation of Hubble's orbit from October 31, 2018, to December 25, 2018. Earth is not shown.

Due to the precession of the orbit, the location of the CVZ moves slowly over a period of eight weeks. Because the limb of the Earth is always within about 30° of regions within the CVZ, the brightness of scattered earthshine may be elevated for long periods during CVZ observations. Hubble orbits in low Earth orbit at an altitude of approximately 540 kilometers (340 mi) and an inclination of 28.5°.[5] The position along its orbit changes over time in a way that is not accurately predictable. The density of the upper atmosphere varies according to many factors, and this means Hubble's predicted position for six weeks' time could be in error by up to 4,000 km (2,500 mi). Observation schedules are typically finalized only a few days in advance, as a longer lead time would mean there was a chance the target would be unobservable by the time it was due to be observed.[69] Engineering support for HST is provided by NASA and contractor personnel at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, 48 km (30 mi) south of the STScI. Hubble's operation is monitored 24 hours per day by four teams of flight controllers who make up Hubble's Flight Operations Team.[65]

Challenger disaster, delays, and eventual launch

 
STS-31 lifting off, carrying Hubble into orbit
 
Hubble being deployed from Discovery in 1990

By January 1986, the planned launch date for Hubble that October looked feasible, but the Challenger disaster brought the U.S. space program to a halt, grounded the Shuttle fleet, and forced the launch to be postponed for several years. During this delay the telescope had to be kept in a clean room, powered up and purged with nitrogen, until a launch could be rescheduled. This costly situation (about US$6 million per month) pushed the overall costs of the project even higher. This delay did allow time for engineers to perform extensive tests, swap out a possibly failure-prone battery, and make other improvements.[70] Furthermore, the ground software needed to control Hubble was not ready in 1986, and was barely ready by the 1990 launch.[71] Following the resumption of shuttle flights, Space Shuttle Discovery successfully launched the Hubble on April 24, 1990, as part of the STS-31 mission.[72]

At launch, NASA had spent approximately US$4.7 billion in inflation-adjusted 2010 dollars on the project.[73] Hubble's cumulative costs are estimated to be about US$11.3 billion in 2015 dollars, which include all subsequent servicing costs, but not ongoing operations, making it the most expensive science mission in NASA history.[74]

List of Hubble instruments

Hubble accommodates five science instruments at a given time, plus the Fine Guidance Sensors, which are mainly used for aiming the telescope but are occasionally used for scientific astrometry measurements. Early instruments were replaced with more advanced ones during the Shuttle servicing missions. COSTAR was a corrective optics device rather than a science instrument, but occupied one of the four axial instrument bays.

Since the final servicing mission in 2009, the four active instruments have been ACS, COS, STIS and WFC3. NICMOS is kept in hibernation, but may be revived if WFC3 were to fail in the future.

Of the former instruments, three (COSTAR, FOS and WFPC2) are displayed in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.[75][76][77] The FOC is in the Dornier museum, Germany.[78] The HSP is in the Space Place at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.[79] The first WFPC was dismantled, and some components were then re-used in WFC3.[80][81]

Flawed mirror

 
An extract from a WF/PC image shows the light from a star spread over a wide area instead of being concentrated on a few pixels.

Within weeks of the launch of the telescope, the returned images indicated a serious problem with the optical system. Although the first images appeared to be sharper than those of ground-based telescopes, Hubble failed to achieve a final sharp focus and the best image quality obtained was drastically lower than expected. Images of point sources spread out over a radius of more than one arcsecond, instead of having a point spread function (PSF) concentrated within a circle 0.1 arcseconds (485 nrad) in diameter, as had been specified in the design criteria.[82][83]

Analysis of the flawed images revealed that the primary mirror had been polished to the wrong shape. Although it was believed to be one of the most precisely figured optical mirrors ever made, smooth to about 10 nanometers,[34] the outer perimeter was too flat by about 2200 nanometers (about 1450 mm or 111000 inch).[84] This difference was catastrophic, introducing severe spherical aberration, a flaw in which light reflecting off the edge of a mirror focuses on a different point from the light reflecting off its center.[85]

The effect of the mirror flaw on scientific observations depended on the particular observation—the core of the aberrated PSF was sharp enough to permit high-resolution observations of bright objects, and spectroscopy of point sources was affected only through a sensitivity loss. However, the loss of light to the large, out-of-focus halo severely reduced the usefulness of the telescope for faint objects or high-contrast imaging. This meant nearly all the cosmological programs were essentially impossible, since they required observation of exceptionally faint objects.[85] This led politicians to question NASA's competence, scientists to rue the cost which could have gone to more productive endeavors, and comedians to make jokes about NASA and the telescope. In the 1991 comedy The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear, in a scene where historical disasters are displayed, Hubble is pictured with RMS Titanic and LZ 129 Hindenburg.[86][87] Nonetheless, during the first three years of the Hubble mission, before the optical corrections, the telescope still carried out a large number of productive observations of less demanding targets.[88] The error was well characterized and stable, enabling astronomers to partially compensate for the defective mirror by using sophisticated image processing techniques such as deconvolution.[89]

Origin of the problem

 
Optical evolution of Hubble's primary camera system. These images show spiral galaxy M100 as seen with WFPC1 in 1993 before corrective optics (left), with WFPC2 in 1994 after correction (center), and with WFC3 in 2018 (right).

A commission headed by Lew Allen, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, was established to determine how the error could have arisen. The Allen Commission found that a reflective null corrector, a testing device used to achieve a properly shaped non-spherical mirror, had been incorrectly assembled—one lens was out of position by 1.3 mm (0.051 in).[90] During the initial grinding and polishing of the mirror, Perkin-Elmer analyzed its surface with two conventional refractive null correctors. However, for the final manufacturing step (figuring), they switched to the custom-built reflective null corrector, designed explicitly to meet very strict tolerances. The incorrect assembly of this device resulted in the mirror being ground very precisely but to the wrong shape. A few final tests, using the conventional null correctors, correctly reported spherical aberration. But these results were dismissed, thus missing the opportunity to catch the error, because the reflective null corrector was considered more accurate.[91]

The commission blamed the failings primarily on Perkin-Elmer. Relations between NASA and the optics company had been severely strained during the telescope construction, due to frequent schedule slippage and cost overruns. NASA found that Perkin-Elmer did not review or supervise the mirror construction adequately, did not assign its best optical scientists to the project (as it had for the prototype), and in particular did not involve the optical designers in the construction and verification of the mirror. While the commission heavily criticized Perkin-Elmer for these managerial failings, NASA was also criticized for not picking up on the quality control shortcomings, such as relying totally on test results from a single instrument.[92]

Design of a solution

Many feared that Hubble would be abandoned.[93] The design of the telescope had always incorporated servicing missions, and astronomers immediately began to seek potential solutions to the problem that could be applied at the first servicing mission, scheduled for 1993. While Kodak had ground a back-up mirror for Hubble, it would have been impossible to replace the mirror in orbit, and too expensive and time-consuming to bring the telescope back to Earth for a refit. Instead, the fact that the mirror had been ground so precisely to the wrong shape led to the design of new optical components with exactly the same error but in the opposite sense, to be added to the telescope at the servicing mission, effectively acting as "spectacles" to correct the spherical aberration.[94][95]

The first step was a precise characterization of the error in the main mirror. Working backwards from images of point sources, astronomers determined that the conic constant of the mirror as built was −1.01390±0.0002, instead of the intended −1.00230.[96][97] The same number was also derived by analyzing the null corrector used by Perkin-Elmer to figure the mirror, as well as by analyzing interferograms obtained during ground testing of the mirror.[98]

 
COSTAR being removed in 2009

Because of the way the HST's instruments were designed, two different sets of correctors were required. The design of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, already planned to replace the existing WF/PC, included relay mirrors to direct light onto the four separate charge-coupled device (CCD) chips making up its two cameras. An inverse error built into their surfaces could completely cancel the aberration of the primary. However, the other instruments lacked any intermediate surfaces that could be configured in this way, and so required an external correction device.[99]

The Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement (COSTAR) system was designed to correct the spherical aberration for light focused at the FOC, FOS, and GHRS. It consists of two mirrors in the light path with one ground to correct the aberration.[100] To fit the COSTAR system onto the telescope, one of the other instruments had to be removed, and astronomers selected the High Speed Photometer to be sacrificed.[99] By 2002, all the original instruments requiring COSTAR had been replaced by instruments with their own corrective optics.[101] COSTAR was removed and returned to Earth in 2009 where it is exhibited at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.[102] The area previously used by COSTAR is now occupied by the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph.[103]

Servicing missions and new instruments

Servicing overview

Space Telescope Imaging SpectrographSpace Telescope Imaging SpectrographFaint Object SpectrographAdvanced Camera for SurveysFaint Object CameraCosmic Origins SpectrographCorrective Optics Space Telescope Axial ReplacementHigh Speed PhotometerNear Infrared Camera and Multi-Object SpectrometerGoddard High Resolution SpectrographWide Field Camera 3Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2Wide Field and Planetary Camera

Hubble was designed to accommodate regular servicing and equipment upgrades while in orbit. Instruments and limited life items were designed as orbital replacement units.[104] Five servicing missions (SM 1, 2, 3A, 3B, and 4) were flown by NASA Space Shuttles, the first in December 1993 and the last in May 2009.[105] Servicing missions were delicate operations that began with maneuvering to intercept the telescope in orbit and carefully retrieving it with the shuttle's mechanical arm. The necessary work was then carried out in multiple tethered spacewalks over a period of four to five days. After a visual inspection of the telescope, astronauts conducted repairs, replaced failed or degraded components, upgraded equipment, and installed new instruments. Once work was completed, the telescope was redeployed, typically after boosting to a higher orbit to address the orbital decay caused by atmospheric drag.[106]

Servicing Mission 1

 
Astronauts Musgrave and Hoffman install corrective optics during SM1

The first Hubble servicing mission was scheduled for 1993 before the mirror problem was discovered. It assumed greater importance, as the astronauts would need to do extensive work to install corrective optics; failure would have resulted in either abandoning Hubble or accepting its permanent disability. Other components failed before the mission, causing the repair cost to rise to $500 million (not including the cost of the shuttle flight). A successful repair would help demonstrate the viability of building Space Station Alpha.[107]

STS-49 in 1992 demonstrated the difficulty of space work. While its rescue of Intelsat 603 received praise, the astronauts had taken possibly reckless risks in doing so. Neither the rescue nor the unrelated assembly of prototype space station components occurred as the astronauts had trained, causing NASA to reassess planning and training, including for the Hubble repair. The agency assigned to the mission Story Musgrave—who had worked on satellite repair procedures since 1976—and six other experienced astronauts, including two from STS-49. The first mission director since Project Apollo would coordinate a crew with 16 previous shuttle flights. The astronauts were trained to use about a hundred specialized tools.[108]

Heat had been the problem on prior spacewalks, which occurred in sunlight. Hubble needed to be repaired out of sunlight. Musgrave discovered during vacuum training, seven months before the mission, that spacesuit gloves did not sufficiently protect against the cold of space. After STS-57 confirmed the issue in orbit, NASA quickly changed equipment, procedures, and flight plan. Seven total mission simulations occurred before launch, the most thorough preparation in shuttle history. No complete Hubble mockup existed, so the astronauts studied many separate models (including one at the Smithsonian) and mentally combined their varying and contradictory details.[109]

Service Mission 1 flew aboard Endeavour in December 1993, and involved installation of several instruments and other equipment over ten days. Most importantly, the High Speed Photometer was replaced with the COSTAR corrective optics package, and WF/PC was replaced with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) with an internal optical correction system. The solar arrays and their drive electronics were also replaced, as well as four gyroscopes in the telescope pointing system, two electrical control units and other electrical components, and two magnetometers. The onboard computers were upgraded with added coprocessors, and Hubble's orbit was boosted.[84]

On January 13, 1994, NASA declared the mission a complete success and showed the first sharper images.[110] The mission was one of the most complex performed up until that date, involving five long extra-vehicular activity periods. Its success was a boon for NASA, as well as for the astronomers who now had a more capable space telescope.[76][111]

Servicing Mission 2

 
Hubble as seen from Discovery during its second servicing mission

Servicing Mission 2, flown by Discovery in February 1997, replaced the GHRS and the FOS with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) and the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS), replaced an Engineering and Science Tape Recorder with a new Solid State Recorder, and repaired thermal insulation.[112] NICMOS contained a heat sink of solid nitrogen to reduce the thermal noise from the instrument, but shortly after it was installed, an unexpected thermal expansion resulted in part of the heat sink coming into contact with an optical baffle. This led to an increased warming rate for the instrument and reduced its original expected lifetime of 4.5 years to about two years.[113]

Servicing Mission 3A

Servicing Mission 3A, flown by Discovery, took place in December 1999, and was a split-off from Servicing Mission 3 after three of the six onboard gyroscopes had failed. The fourth failed a few weeks before the mission, rendering the telescope incapable of performing scientific observations. The mission replaced all six gyroscopes, replaced a Fine Guidance Sensor and the computer, installed a Voltage/temperature Improvement Kit (VIK) to prevent battery overcharging, and replaced thermal insulation blankets.[114]

Servicing Mission 3B

Servicing Mission 3B flown by Columbia in March 2002 saw the installation of a new instrument, with the FOC (which, except for the Fine Guidance Sensors when used for astrometry, was the last of the original instruments) being replaced by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). This meant COSTAR was no longer required, since all new instruments had built-in correction for the main mirror aberration.[101] The mission also revived NICMOS by installing a closed-cycle cooler[113] and replaced the solar arrays for the second time, providing 30 percent more power.[115]

Servicing Mission 4

 
Hubble during Servicing Mission 4
 
Hubble after release

Plans called for Hubble to be serviced in February 2005, but the Columbia disaster in 2003, in which the orbiter disintegrated on re-entry into the atmosphere, had wide-ranging effects to the Hubble program and other NASA missions. NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe decided all future shuttle missions had to be able to reach the safe haven of the International Space Station should in-flight problems develop. As no shuttles were capable of reaching both HST and the space station during the same mission, future crewed service missions were canceled.[116] This decision was criticised by numerous astronomers who felt Hubble was valuable enough to merit the human risk.[117] HST's planned successor, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), by 2004 was not expected to launch until at least 2011. JWST was eventually launched in December 2021.[118] A gap in space-observing capabilities between a decommissioning of Hubble and the commissioning of a successor was of major concern to many astronomers, given the significant scientific impact of HST.[119] The consideration that JWST will not be located in low Earth orbit, and therefore cannot be easily upgraded or repaired in the event of an early failure, only made concerns more acute. On the other hand, NASA officials were concerned that continuing to service Hubble would consume funds from other programs and delay the JWST.[120]

In January 2004, O'Keefe said he would review his decision to cancel the final servicing mission to HST, due to public outcry and requests from Congress for NASA to look for a way to save it. The National Academy of Sciences convened an official panel, which recommended in July 2004 that the HST should be preserved despite the apparent risks. Their report urged "NASA should take no actions that would preclude a space shuttle servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope".[121] In August 2004, O'Keefe asked Goddard Space Flight Center to prepare a detailed proposal for a robotic service mission. These plans were later canceled, the robotic mission being described as "not feasible".[122] In late 2004, several Congressional members, led by Senator Barbara Mikulski, held public hearings and carried on a fight with much public support (including thousands of letters from school children across the U.S.) to get the Bush Administration and NASA to reconsider the decision to drop plans for a Hubble rescue mission.[123]

 
Nickel–hydrogen battery pack for Hubble

The nomination in April 2005 of a new NASA Administrator, Michael D. Griffin, changed the situation, as Griffin stated he would consider a crewed servicing mission.[124] Soon after his appointment Griffin authorized Goddard to proceed with preparations for a crewed Hubble maintenance flight, saying he would make the final decision after the next two shuttle missions. In October 2006 Griffin gave the final go-ahead, and the 11-day mission by Atlantis was scheduled for October 2008. Hubble's main data-handling unit failed in September 2008,[125] halting all reporting of scientific data until its back-up was brought online on October 25, 2008.[126] Since a failure of the backup unit would leave the HST helpless, the service mission was postponed to incorporate a replacement for the primary unit.[125]

Servicing Mission 4 (SM4), flown by Atlantis in May 2009, was the last scheduled shuttle mission for HST.[103][127] SM4 installed the replacement data-handling unit, repaired the ACS and STIS systems, installed improved nickel hydrogen batteries, and replaced other components including all six gyroscopes. SM4 also installed two new observation instruments—Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) and the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS)[128]—and the Soft Capture and Rendezvous System, which will enable the future rendezvous, capture, and safe disposal of Hubble by either a crewed or robotic mission.[129] Except for the ACS's High Resolution Channel, which could not be repaired and was disabled,[130][131][132] the work accomplished during SM4 rendered the telescope fully functional.[103]

Major projects

 
One of Hubble's most famous images, Pillars of Creation, shows stars forming in the Eagle Nebula.

Since the start of the program, a number of research projects have been carried out, some of them almost solely with Hubble, others coordinated facilities such as Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESO's Very Large Telescope. Although the Hubble observatory is nearing the end of its life, there are still major projects scheduled for it. One example is the current (2022) ULLYSES project (Ultraviolet Legacy Library of Young Stars as Essential Standards) which will last for three years to observe a set of high- and low-mass young stars and will shed light on star formation and composition.

Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey

In an August 2013 press release, CANDELS was referred to as "the largest project in the history of Hubble". The survey "aims to explore galactic evolution in the early Universe, and the very first seeds of cosmic structure at less than one billion years after the Big Bang."[133] The CANDELS project site describes the survey's goals as the following:[134]

The Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey is designed to document the first third of galactic evolution from z = 8 to 1.5 via deep imaging of more than 250,000 galaxies with WFC3/IR and ACS. It will also find the first Type Ia SNe beyond z > 1.5 and establish their accuracy as standard candles for cosmology. Five premier multi-wavelength sky regions are selected; each has multi-wavelength data from Spitzer and other facilities, and has extensive spectroscopy of the brighter galaxies. The use of five widely separated fields mitigates cosmic variance and yields statistically robust and complete samples of galaxies down to 109 solar masses out to z ~ 8.

Frontier Fields program

 
The Frontier Fields program studied MACS0416.1-2403.

The program, officially named "Hubble Deep Fields Initiative 2012", is aimed to advance the knowledge of early galaxy formation by studying high-redshift galaxies in blank fields with the help of gravitational lensing to see the "faintest galaxies in the distant universe".[135] The Frontier Fields web page describes the goals of the program being:

  • to reveal hitherto inaccessible populations of z = 5–10 galaxies that are ten to fifty times fainter intrinsically than any presently known
  • to solidify our understanding of the stellar masses and star formation histories of sub-L* galaxies at the earliest times
  • to provide the first statistically meaningful morphological characterization of star forming galaxies at z > 5
  • to find z > 8 galaxies stretched out enough by cluster lensing to discern internal structure and/or magnified enough by cluster lensing for spectroscopic follow-up.[136]

Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS)

The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS)[137] is an astronomical survey designed to probe the formation and evolution of galaxies as a function of both cosmic time (redshift) and the local galaxy environment. The survey covers a two square degree equatorial field with spectroscopy and X-ray to radio imaging by most of the major space-based telescopes and a number of large ground based telescopes,[138] making it a key focus region of extragalactic astrophysics. COSMOS was launched in 2006 as the largest project pursued by the Hubble Space Telescope at the time, and still is the largest continuous area of sky covered for the purposes of mapping deep space in blank fields, 2.5 times the area of the moon on the sky and 17 times larger than the largest of the CANDELS regions. The COSMOS scientific collaboration that was forged from the initial COSMOS survey is the largest and longest-running extragalactic collaboration, known for its collegiality and openness. The study of galaxies in their environment can be done only with large areas of the sky, larger than a half square degree.[139] More than two million galaxies are detected, spanning 90% of the age of the Universe. The COSMOS collaboration is led by Caitlin Casey, Jeyhan Kartaltepe, and Vernesa Smolcic and involves more than 200 scientists in a dozen countries.[137]

Public use

Proposal process

 
Star cluster Pismis 24 with nebula

Anyone can apply for time on the telescope; there are no restrictions on nationality or academic affiliation, but funding for analysis is available only to U.S. institutions.[140] Competition for time on the telescope is intense, with about one-fifth of the proposals submitted in each cycle earning time on the schedule.[141][142]

Calls for proposals are issued roughly annually, with time allocated for a cycle lasting about one year. Proposals are divided into several categories; "general observer" proposals are the most common, covering routine observations. "Snapshot observations" are those in which targets require only 45 minutes or less of telescope time, including overheads such as acquiring the target. Snapshot observations are used to fill in gaps in the telescope schedule that cannot be filled by regular general observer programs.[143]

Astronomers may make "Target of Opportunity" proposals, in which observations are scheduled if a transient event covered by the proposal occurs during the scheduling cycle. In addition, up to 10% of the telescope time is designated "director's discretionary" (DD) time. Astronomers can apply to use DD time at any time of year, and it is typically awarded for study of unexpected transient phenomena such as supernovae.[144]

Other uses of DD time have included the observations that led to views of the Hubble Deep Field and Hubble Ultra Deep Field, and in the first four cycles of telescope time, observations that were carried out by amateur astronomers.[145][146]

In 2012, the ESA held a contest for public image processing of Hubble data to encourage the discovery of "hidden treasures" in the raw Hubble data.[147][148]

Use by amateur astronomers

 
The HST is sometimes visible from the ground, as in this 39-second exposure when it is in Orion. Maximum brightness about magnitude 1.

The first director of STScI, Riccardo Giacconi, announced in 1986 that he intended to devote some of his director discretionary time to allowing amateur astronomers to use the telescope. The total time to be allocated was only a few hours per cycle but excited great interest among amateur astronomers.[145][146]

Proposals for amateur time were stringently reviewed by a committee of amateur astronomers, and time was awarded only to proposals that were deemed to have genuine scientific merit, did not duplicate proposals made by professionals, and required the unique capabilities of the space telescope. Thirteen amateur astronomers were awarded time on the telescope, with observations being carried out between 1990 and 1997.[145] One such study was "Transition Comets—UV Search for OH". The first proposal, "A Hubble Space Telescope Study of Posteclipse Brightening and Albedo Changes on Io", was published in Icarus,[149] a journal devoted to solar system studies. A second study from another group of amateurs was also published in Icarus.[150] After that time, however, budget reductions at STScI made the support of work by amateur astronomers untenable, and no additional amateur programs have been carried out.[145][146]

Regular Hubble proposals still include findings or discovered objects by amateurs and citizen scientists. These observations are often in a collaboration with professional astronomers. One of earliest such observations is the Great White Spot of 1990[151] on planet Saturn, discovered by amateur astronomer S. Wilber[152] and observed by HST under a proposal by J. Westphal (Caltech).[153][154] Later professional-amateur observations by Hubble include discoveries by the Galaxy Zoo project, such as Voorwerpjes and Green Pea galaxies.[155][156] The "Gems of the Galaxies" program is based on a list of objects by galaxy zoo volunteers that was shortened with the help of an online vote.[157] Additionally there are observations of minor planets discovered by amateur astronomers, such as 2I/Borisov and changes in the atmosphere of the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn or the ice giants Uranus and Neptune.[158][159] In the pro-am collaboration backyard worlds the HST was used to observe a planetary mass object, called WISE J0830+2837. The non-detection by the HST helped to classify this peculiar object.[160]

Scientific results

Hubble Legacy Field (50-second video)

Key projects

In the early 1980s, NASA and STScI convened four panels to discuss key projects. These were projects that were both scientifically important and would require significant telescope time, which would be explicitly dedicated to each project. This guaranteed that these particular projects would be completed early, in case the telescope failed sooner than expected. The panels identified three such projects: 1) a study of the nearby intergalactic medium using quasar absorption lines to determine the properties of the intergalactic medium and the gaseous content of galaxies and groups of galaxies;[161] 2) a medium deep survey using the Wide Field Camera to take data whenever one of the other instruments was being used[162] and 3) a project to determine the Hubble constant within ten percent by reducing the errors, both external and internal, in the calibration of the distance scale.[163]

Important discoveries

 
Hubble Extreme Deep Field image of space in the constellation Fornax

Hubble has helped resolve some long-standing problems in astronomy, while also raising new questions. Some results have required new theories to explain them.

Age and expansion of the universe

Among its primary mission targets was to measure distances to Cepheid variable stars more accurately than ever before, and thus constrain the value of the Hubble constant, the measure of the rate at which the universe is expanding, which is also related to its age. Before the launch of HST, estimates of the Hubble constant typically had errors of up to 50%, but Hubble measurements of Cepheid variables in the Virgo Cluster and other distant galaxy clusters provided a measured value with an accuracy of ±10%, which is consistent with other more accurate measurements made since Hubble's launch using other techniques.[164] The estimated age is now about 13.7 billion years, but before the Hubble Telescope, scientists predicted an age ranging from 10 to 20 billion years.[165]

While Hubble helped to refine estimates of the age of the universe, it also upended theories about its future. Astronomers from the High-z Supernova Search Team and the Supernova Cosmology Project used ground-based telescopes and HST to observe distant supernovae and uncovered evidence that, far from decelerating under the influence of gravity, the expansion of the universe is instead accelerating. Three members of these two groups have subsequently been awarded Nobel Prizes for their discovery.[166] The cause of this acceleration remains poorly understood;[167] the term used for the currently-unknown cause is dark energy, signifying that it is dark (unable to be directly seen and detected) to our current scientific instruments.[168]

 
An illustration of a black hole

Black holes

The high-resolution spectra and images provided by the HST have been especially well-suited to establishing the prevalence of black holes in the center of nearby galaxies. While it had been hypothesized in the early 1960s that black holes would be found at the centers of some galaxies, and astronomers in the 1980s identified a number of good black hole candidates, work conducted with Hubble shows that black holes are probably common to the centers of all galaxies.[169] The Hubble programs further established that the masses of the nuclear black holes and properties of the galaxies are closely related.[170][171]

Extending visible wavelength images

A unique window on the Universe enabled by Hubble are the Hubble Deep Field, Hubble Ultra-Deep Field, and Hubble Extreme Deep Field images, which used Hubble's unmatched sensitivity at visible wavelengths to create images of small patches of sky that are the deepest ever obtained at optical wavelengths. The images reveal galaxies billions of light years away, thereby providing information about the early Universe, and have accordingly generated a wealth of scientific papers. The Wide Field Camera 3 improved the view of these fields in the infrared and ultraviolet, supporting the discovery of some of the most distant objects yet discovered, such as MACS0647-JD.[172]

The non-standard object SCP 06F6 was discovered by the Hubble Space Telescope in February 2006.[173][174]

On March 3, 2016, researchers using Hubble data announced the discovery of the farthest confirmed galaxy to date: GN-z11, which Hubble observed as it existed roughly 400 million years after the Big Bang.[175] The Hubble observations occurred on February 11, 2015, and April 3, 2015, as part of the CANDELS/GOODS-North surveys.[176][177]

Solar System discoveries

 
Hubble's STIS UV and ACS visible light combined to reveal Saturn's southern aurora
 
Brown spots mark Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 impact sites on Jupiter's southern hemisphere. Imaged by Hubble.

The collision of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter in 1994 was fortuitously timed for astronomers, coming just a few months after Servicing Mission 1 had restored Hubble's optical performance. Hubble images of the planet were sharper than any taken since the passage of Voyager 2 in 1979, and were crucial in studying the dynamics of the collision of a large comet with Jupiter, an event believed to occur once every few centuries.[178]

In March 2015, researchers announced that measurements of aurorae around Ganymede, one of Jupiter's moons, revealed that it has a subsurface ocean. Using Hubble to study the motion of its aurorae, the researchers determined that a large saltwater ocean was helping to suppress the interaction between Jupiter's magnetic field and that of Ganymede. The ocean is estimated to be 100 km (60 mi) deep, trapped beneath a 150 km (90 mi) ice crust.[179][180]

HST has also been used to study objects in the outer reaches of the Solar System, including the dwarf planets Pluto,[181] Eris,[182] and Sedna.[183] During June and July 2012, U.S. astronomers using Hubble discovered Styx, a tiny fifth moon orbiting Pluto.[184]

From June to August 2015, Hubble was used to search for a Kuiper belt object (KBO) target for the New Horizons Kuiper Belt Extended Mission (KEM) when similar searches with ground telescopes failed to find a suitable target.[185] This resulted in the discovery of at least five new KBOs, including the eventual KEM target, 486958 Arrokoth, that New Horizons performed a close fly-by of on January 1, 2019.[186][187][188]

In April 2022 NASA announced that astronomers were able to use images from HST to determine the size of the nucleus of comet C/2014 UN271 (Bernardinelli–Bernstein), which is the largest icy comet nucleus ever seen by astronomers. The nucleus of C/2014 UN271 has an estimated mass of 50 trillion tons which is 50 times the mass of other known comets in our solar system.[189]

 
Hubble and ALMA image of MACS J1149.5+2223[190]

Supernova reappearance

On December 11, 2015, Hubble captured an image of the first-ever predicted reappearance of a supernova, dubbed "Refsdal", which was calculated using different mass models of a galaxy cluster whose gravity is warping the supernova's light. The supernova was previously seen in November 2014 behind galaxy cluster MACS J1149.5+2223 as part of Hubble's Frontier Fields program. The light from the cluster took roughly five billion years to reach Earth, while the light from the supernova behind it took five billion more years than that, as measured by their respective redshifts. Because of the gravitational effect of the galaxy cluster, four images of the supernova appeared instead of one, an example of an Einstein cross. Based on early lens models, a fifth image was predicted to reappear by the end of 2015.[191] Refsdal reappeared as predicted in 2015.[192]

Mass and size of Milky Way

In March 2019, observations from Hubble and data from the European Space Agency's Gaia space observatory were combined to determine that the mass of the Milky Way Galaxy is approximately 1.5 trillion times the mass of the Sun, a value intermediate between prior estimates.[193]

Other discoveries

Other discoveries made with Hubble data include proto-planetary disks (proplyds) in the Orion Nebula;[194] evidence for the presence of extrasolar planets around Sun-like stars;[195] and the optical counterparts of the still-mysterious gamma-ray bursts.[196] Using gravitational lensing, Hubble observed a galaxy designated MACS 2129-1 approximately 10 billion light-years from Earth. MACS 2129-1 subverted expectations about galaxies in which new star formation had ceased, a significant result for understanding the formation of elliptical galaxies.[197]

In 2022 Hubble detected the light of the farthest individual star ever seen to date. The star, WHL0137-LS (nicknamed Earendel), existed within the first billion years after the big bang. It will be observed by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope to confirm Earendel is indeed a star.[198]

Impact on astronomy

 
Evolution of detecting the early Universe
 
Some of the Carina nebula by WFC3

Many objective measures show the positive impact of Hubble data on astronomy. Over 15,000 papers based on Hubble data have been published in peer-reviewed journals,[199] and countless more have appeared in conference proceedings. Looking at papers several years after their publication, about one-third of all astronomy papers have no citations, while only two percent of papers based on Hubble data have no citations. On average, a paper based on Hubble data receives about twice as many citations as papers based on non-Hubble data. Of the 200 papers published each year that receive the most citations, about 10% are based on Hubble data.[200]

Although the HST has clearly helped astronomical research, its financial cost has been large. A study on the relative astronomical benefits of different sizes of telescopes found that while papers based on HST data generate 15 times as many citations as a 4 m (13 ft) ground-based telescope such as the William Herschel Telescope, the HST costs about 100 times as much to build and maintain.[201]

Deciding between building ground- versus space-based telescopes is complex. Even before Hubble was launched, specialized ground-based techniques such as aperture masking interferometry had obtained higher-resolution optical and infrared images than Hubble would achieve, though restricted to targets about 108 times brighter than the faintest targets observed by Hubble.[202][203] Since then, advances in adaptive optics have extended the high-resolution imaging capabilities of ground-based telescopes to the infrared imaging of faint objects. The usefulness of adaptive optics versus HST observations depends strongly on the particular details of the research questions being asked. In the visible bands, adaptive optics can correct only a relatively small field of view, whereas HST can conduct high-resolution optical imaging over a wider field.[204] Moreover, Hubble can image more faint objects, since ground-based telescopes are affected by the background of scattered light created by the Earth's atmosphere.[205]

Impact on aerospace engineering

In addition to its scientific results, Hubble has also made significant contributions to aerospace engineering, in particular the performance of systems in low Earth orbit (LEO). These insights result from Hubble's long lifetime on orbit, extensive instrumentation, and return of assemblies to the Earth where they can be studied in detail. In particular, Hubble has contributed to studies of the behavior of graphite composite structures in vacuum, optical contamination from residual gas and human servicing, radiation damage to electronics and sensors, and the long term behavior of multi-layer insulation.[206] One lesson learned was that gyroscopes assembled using pressurized oxygen to deliver suspension fluid were prone to failure due to electric wire corrosion. Gyroscopes are now assembled using pressurized nitrogen.[207] Another is that optical surfaces in LEO can have surprisingly long lifetimes; Hubble was only expected to last 15 years before the mirror became unusable, but after 14 years there was no measureable degradation.[117] Finally, Hubble servicing missions, particularly those that serviced components not designed for in-space maintenance, have contributed towards the development of new tools and techniques for on-orbit repair.[208]

Hubble data

 
Hubble precision stellar distance measurement has been extended ten times further into the Milky Way.[209]

Transmission to Earth

Hubble data was initially stored on the spacecraft. When launched, the storage facilities were old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape drives, but these were replaced by solid state data storage facilities during servicing missions 2 and 3A. About twice daily, the Hubble Space Telescope radios data to a satellite in the geosynchronous Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS), which then downlinks the science data to one of two 60-foot (18-meter) diameter high-gain microwave antennas located at the White Sands Test Facility in White Sands, New Mexico.[142] From there they are sent to the Space Telescope Operations Control Center at Goddard Space Flight Center, and finally to the Space Telescope Science Institute for archiving.[142] Each week, HST downlinks approximately 140 gigabits of data.[2]

Color images

 
Data analysis of a spectrum revealing the chemistry of hidden clouds

All images from Hubble are monochromatic grayscale, taken through a variety of filters, each passing specific wavelengths of light, and incorporated in each camera. Color images are created by combining separate monochrome images taken through different filters. This process can also create false-color versions of images including infrared and ultraviolet channels, where infrared is typically rendered as a deep red and ultraviolet is rendered as a deep blue.[210][211]

Archives

All Hubble data is eventually made available via the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes at STScI,[212] CADC[213] and ESA/ESAC.[214] Data is usually proprietary—available only to the principal investigator (PI) and astronomers designated by the PI—for twelve months after being taken. The PI can apply to the director of the STScI to extend or reduce the proprietary period in some circumstances.[215]

Observations made on Director's Discretionary Time are exempt from the proprietary period, and are released to the public immediately. Calibration data such as flat fields and dark frames are also publicly available straight away. All data in the archive is in the FITS format, which is suitable for astronomical analysis but not for public use.[216] The Hubble Heritage Project processes and releases to the public a small selection of the most striking images in JPEG and TIFF formats.[217]

Pipeline reduction

Astronomical data taken with CCDs must undergo several calibration steps before they are suitable for astronomical analysis. STScI has developed sophisticated software that automatically calibrates data when they are requested from the archive using the best calibration files available. This 'on-the-fly' processing means large data requests can take a day or more to be processed and returned. The process by which data is calibrated automatically is known as 'pipeline reduction', and is increasingly common at major observatories. Astronomers may if they wish retrieve the calibration files themselves and run the pipeline reduction software locally. This may be desirable when calibration files other than those selected automatically need to be used.[218]

Data analysis

Hubble data can be analyzed using many different packages. STScI maintains the custom-made Space Telescope Science Data Analysis System (STSDAS) software, which contains all the programs needed to run pipeline reduction on raw data files, as well as many other astronomical image processing tools, tailored to the requirements of Hubble data. The software runs as a module of IRAF, a popular astronomical data reduction program.[219]

Outreach activities

 
In 2001, NASA polled internet users to find out what they would most like Hubble to observe; they overwhelmingly selected the Horsehead Nebula.
 
One-quarter scale model at the courthouse in Marshfield, Missouri, a hometown of Edwin Hubble

NASA considered it important for the Space Telescope to capture the public's imagination, given the considerable contribution of taxpayers to its construction and operational costs.[220] After the difficult early years when the faulty mirror severely dented Hubble's reputation with the public, the first servicing mission allowed its rehabilitation as the corrected optics produced numerous remarkable images.[76][221]

Several initiatives have helped to keep the public informed about Hubble activities. In the United States, outreach efforts are coordinated by the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) Office for Public Outreach, which was established in 2000 to ensure that U.S. taxpayers saw the benefits of their investment in the space telescope program. To that end, STScI operates the HubbleSite.org website. The Hubble Heritage Project, operating out of the STScI, provides the public with high-quality images of the most interesting and striking objects observed. The Heritage team is composed of amateur and professional astronomers, as well as people with backgrounds outside astronomy, and emphasizes the aesthetic nature of Hubble images. The Heritage Project is granted a small amount of time to observe objects which, for scientific reasons, may not have images taken at enough wavelengths to construct a full-color image.[217]

Since 1999, the leading Hubble outreach group in Europe has been the Hubble European Space Agency Information Centre (HEIC).[222] This office was established at the Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility in Munich, Germany. HEIC's mission is to fulfill HST outreach and education tasks for the European Space Agency. The work is centered on the production of news and photo releases that highlight interesting Hubble results and images. These are often European in origin, and so increase awareness of both ESA's Hubble share (15%) and the contribution of European scientists to the observatory. ESA produces educational material, including a videocast series called Hubblecast designed to share world-class scientific news with the public.[223]

The Hubble Space Telescope has won two Space Achievement Awards from the Space Foundation, for its outreach activities, in 2001 and 2010.[224]

A replica of the Hubble Space Telescope is on the courthouse lawn in Marshfield, Missouri, the hometown of namesake Edwin P. Hubble.[225]

Celebration images

 
A pillar of gas and dust in the Carina Nebula. This Wide Field Camera 3 image, dubbed Mystic Mountain, was released in 2010 to commemorate Hubble's 20th anniversary in space.

The Hubble Space Telescope celebrated its 20th anniversary in space on April 24, 2010. To commemorate the occasion, NASA, ESA, and the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) released an image from the Carina Nebula.[226]

To commemorate Hubble's 25th anniversary in space on April 24, 2015, STScI released images of the Westerlund 2 cluster, located about 20,000 light-years (6,100 pc) away in the constellation Carina, through its Hubble 25 website.[227] The European Space Agency created a dedicated 25th anniversary page on its website.[228] In April 2016, a special celebratory image of the Bubble Nebula was released for Hubble's 26th "birthday".[229]

Equipment failures

Gyroscope rotation sensors

HST uses gyroscopes to detect and measure any rotations so it can stabilize itself in orbit and point accurately and steadily at astronomical targets. Three gyroscopes are normally required for operation; observations are still possible with two or one, but the area of sky that can be viewed would be somewhat restricted, and observations requiring very accurate pointing are more difficult.[230] In 2018, the plan was to drop into one-gyroscope mode if fewer than three working gyroscopes were operational. The gyroscopes are part of the Pointing Control System, which uses five types of sensors (magnetic sensors, optical sensors, and the gyroscopes) and two types of actuators (reaction wheels and magnetic torquers).[231]

After the Columbia disaster in 2003, it was unclear whether another servicing mission would be possible, and gyroscope life became a concern again, so engineers developed new software for two-gyroscope and one-gyroscope modes to maximize the potential lifetime. The development was successful, and in 2005, it was decided to switch to two-gyroscope mode for regular telescope operations as a means of extending the lifetime of the mission. The switch to this mode was made in August 2005, leaving Hubble with two gyroscopes in use, two on backup, and two inoperable.[232] One more gyroscope failed in 2007.[233]

By the time of the final repair mission in May 2009, during which all six gyroscopes were replaced (with two new pairs and one refurbished pair), only three were still working. Engineers determined that the gyroscope failures were caused by corrosion of electric wires powering the motor that was initiated by oxygen-pressurized air used to deliver the thick suspending fluid.[207] The new gyroscope models were assembled using pressurized nitrogen[207] and were expected to be much more reliable.[234] In the 2009 servicing mission all six gyroscopes were replaced, and after almost ten years only three gyroscopes failed, and only after exceeding the average expected run time for the design.[235]

Of the six gyroscopes replaced in 2009, three were of the old design susceptible for flex-lead failure, and three were of the new design with a longer expected lifetime. The first of the old-style gyroscopes failed in March 2014, and the second in April 2018. On October 5, 2018, the last of the old-style gyroscopes failed, and one of the new-style gyroscopes was powered-up from standby state. However, that reserve gyroscope did not immediately perform within operational limits, and so the observatory was placed into "safe" mode while scientists attempted to fix the problem.[236][237] NASA tweeted on October 22, 2018, that the "rotation rates produced by the backup gyro have reduced and are now within a normal range. Additional tests [are] to be performed to ensure Hubble can return to science operations with this gyro."[238]

The solution that restored the backup new-style gyroscope to operational range was widely reported as "turning it off and on again".[239] A "running restart" of the gyroscope was performed, but this had no effect, and the final resolution to the failure was more complex. The failure was attributed to an inconsistency in the fluid surrounding the float within the gyroscope (e.g., an air bubble). On October 18, 2018, the Hubble Operations Team directed the spacecraft into a series of maneuvers—moving the spacecraft in opposite directions—in order to mitigate the inconsistency. Only after the maneuvers, and a subsequent set of maneuvers on October 19, did the gyroscope truly operate within its normal range.[240]

 
Hubble views the Fomalhaut system. This false-color image was taken in October 2004 and July 2006 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys.

Instruments and electronics

Past servicing missions have exchanged old instruments for new ones, avoiding failure and making new types of science possible. Without servicing missions, all the instruments will eventually fail. In August 2004, the power system of the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) failed, rendering the instrument inoperable. The electronics had originally been fully redundant, but the first set of electronics failed in May 2001.[241] This power supply was fixed during Servicing Mission 4 in May 2009.[242]

Similarly, the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) main camera primary electronics failed in June 2006, and the power supply for the backup electronics failed on January 27, 2007.[243] Only the instrument's Solar Blind Channel (SBC) was operable using the side-1 electronics. A new power supply for the wide angle channel was added during SM 4, but quick tests revealed this did not help the high resolution channel.[244] The Wide Field Channel (WFC) was returned to service by STS-125 in May 2009 but the High Resolution Channel (HRC) remains offline.[245]

On January 8, 2019, Hubble entered a partial safe mode following suspected hardware problems in its most advanced instrument, the Wide Field Camera 3 instrument. NASA later reported that the cause of the safe mode within the instrument was a detection of voltage levels out of a defined range. On January 15, 2019, NASA said the cause of the failure was a software problem. Engineering data within the telemetry circuits were not accurate. In addition, all other telemetry within those circuits also contained erroneous values indicating that this was a telemetry issue and not a power supply issue. After resetting the telemetry circuits and associated boards the instrument began functioning again. On January 17, 2019, the device was returned to normal operation and on the same day it completed its first science observations.[246][247]

2021 power control issue

On June 13, 2021, Hubble's payload computer halted due to a suspected issue with a memory module. An attempt to restart the computer on June 14 failed. Further attempts to switch to one of three other backup memory modules on board the spacecraft failed on June 18. On June 23 and 24, NASA engineers switched Hubble to a backup payload computer, but these operations have failed as well with the same error. On June 28, 2021, NASA announced that it was extending the investigation to other components.[248][249] Scientific operations were suspended while NASA worked to diagnose and resolve the issue.[250][251] After identifying a malfunctioning power control unit (PCU) supplying power to one of Hubble's computers, NASA was able to switch to a backup PCU and bring Hubble back to operational mode on July 16.[252][253][254][255] On October 23, 2021, HST instruments reported missing synchronization messages[256] and went into safe mode.[257] By December 8, 2021, NASA had restored full science operations and was developing updates to make instruments more resilient to missing synchronization messages.[258]

Future

Orbital decay and controlled reentry

 
Illustration of the Soft Capture Mechanism (SCM) installed on Hubble

Hubble orbits the Earth in the extremely tenuous upper atmosphere, and over time its orbit decays due to drag. If not reboosted, it will re-enter the Earth's atmosphere within some decades, with the exact date depending on how active the Sun is and its impact on the upper atmosphere. If Hubble were to descend in a completely uncontrolled re-entry, parts of the main mirror and its support structure would probably survive, leaving the potential for damage or even human fatalities.[259] In 2013, deputy project manager James Jeletic projected that Hubble could survive into the 2020s.[4] Based on solar activity and atmospheric drag, or lack thereof, a natural atmospheric reentry for Hubble will occur between 2028 and 2040.[4][260] In June 2016, NASA extended the service contract for Hubble until June 2021.[261] In November 2021, NASA extended the service contract for Hubble until June 2026.[262]

NASA's original plan for safely de-orbiting Hubble was to retrieve it using a Space Shuttle. Hubble would then have most likely been displayed in the Smithsonian Institution. This is no longer possible since the Space Shuttle fleet has been retired, and would have been unlikely in any case due to the cost of the mission and risk to the crew. Instead, NASA considered adding an external propulsion module to allow controlled re-entry.[263] Ultimately, in 2009, as part of Servicing Mission 4, the last servicing mission by the Space Shuttle, NASA installed the Soft Capture Mechanism (SCM), to enable deorbit by either a crewed or robotic mission. The SCM, together with the Relative Navigation System (RNS), mounted on the Shuttle to collect data to "enable NASA to pursue numerous options for the safe de-orbit of Hubble", constitute the Soft Capture and Rendezvous System (SCRS).[129][264]

Possible service missions

As of 2017, the Trump Administration was considering a proposal by the Sierra Nevada Corporation to use a crewed version of its Dream Chaser spacecraft to service Hubble some time in the 2020s both as a continuation of its scientific capabilities and as insurance against any malfunctions in the James Webb Space Telescope.[265] In 2020, John Grunsfeld said that SpaceX Crew Dragon or Orion could perform another repair mission within ten years. While robotic technology is not yet sophisticated enough, he said, with another crewed visit "We could keep Hubble going for another few decades" with new gyros and instruments.[266]

In September 2022, NASA and SpaceX signed a Space Act Agreement to investigate the possibility of launching a Crew Dragon mission to service and boost Hubble to a higher orbit, possibly extending its lifespan by another 20 years.[267]

Successors

 Visible spectrum range 
Color Wavelength
violet 380–450 nm
blue 450–475 nm
cyan 476–495 nm
green 495–570 nm
yellow 570–590 nm
orange 590–620 nm
red 620–750 nm

There is no direct replacement to Hubble as an ultraviolet and visible light space telescope, because near-term space telescopes do not duplicate Hubble's wavelength coverage (near-ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths), instead concentrating on the further infrared bands. These bands are preferred for studying high redshift and low-temperature objects, objects generally older and farther away in the universe. These wavelengths are also difficult or impossible to study from the ground, justifying the expense of a space-based telescope. Large ground-based telescopes can image some of the same wavelengths as Hubble, sometimes challenge HST in terms of resolution by using adaptive optics (AO), have much larger light-gathering power, and can be upgraded more easily, but cannot yet match Hubble's excellent resolution over a wide field of view with the very dark background of space.[204][205]

Plans for a Hubble successor materialized as the Next Generation Space Telescope project, which culminated in plans for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the formal successor of Hubble.[268] Very different from a scaled-up Hubble, it is designed to operate colder and farther away from the Earth at the L2 Lagrangian point, where thermal and optical interference from the Earth and Moon are lessened. It is not engineered to be fully serviceable (such as replaceable instruments), but the design includes a docking ring to enable visits from other spacecraft.[269] A main scientific goal of JWST is to observe the most distant objects in the universe, beyond the reach of existing instruments. It is expected to detect stars in the early Universe approximately 280 million years older than stars HST now detects.[270] The telescope is an international collaboration between NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency since 1996,[271] and was launched on December 25, 2021, on an Ariane 5 rocket.[272] Although JWST is primarily an infrared instrument, its coverage extends down to 600 nm wavelength light, or roughly orange in the visible spectrum. A typical human eye can see to about 750 nm wavelength light, so there is some overlap with the longest visible wavelength bands, including orange and red light.[273]

 
Hubble and JWST mirrors (4.0 m2 and 25 m2 respectively)

A complementary telescope, looking at even longer wavelengths than Hubble or JWST, was the European Space Agency's Herschel Space Observatory, launched on May 14, 2009. Like JWST, Herschel was not designed to be serviced after launch, and had a mirror substantially larger than Hubble's, but observed only in the far infrared and submillimeter. It needed helium coolant, of which it ran out on April 29, 2013.[274]

Selected space telescopes and instruments[275]
Name Year Wavelength Aperture
Human eye 0.39–0.75 μm 0.005 m
Spitzer 2003 3–180 μm 0.85 m
Hubble STIS 1997 0.115–1.03 μm 2.4 m
Hubble WFC3 2009 0.2–1.7 μm 2.4 m
Herschel 2009 55–672 μm 3.5 m
JWST 2021 0.6–28.5 μm 6.5 m

Further concepts for advanced 21st-century space telescopes include the Large Ultraviolet Optical Infrared Surveyor (LUVOIR),[276] a conceptualized 8 to 16.8 meters (310 to 660 inches) optical space telescope that if realized could be a more direct successor to HST, with the ability to observe and photograph astronomical objects in the visible, ultraviolet, and infrared wavelengths, with substantially better resolution than Hubble or the Spitzer Space Telescope. The final planning report, prepared for the 2020 Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal Survey, suggested a launch date of 2039.[277] The Decadal Survey eventually recommended that ideas for LUVOIR be combined with the Habitable Exoplanet Observer proposal to devise a new, 6-meter flagship telescope that could launch in the 2040s.[278]

Existing ground-based telescopes, and various proposed Extremely Large Telescopes, can exceed the HST in terms of sheer light-gathering power and diffraction limit due to larger mirrors, but other factors affect telescopes. In some cases, they may be able to match or exceed Hubble in resolution by using adaptive optics (AO). However, AO on large ground-based reflectors will not make Hubble and other space telescopes obsolete. Most AO systems sharpen the view over a very narrow field—Lucky Cam, for example, produces crisp images just 10 to 20 arcseconds wide, whereas Hubble's cameras produce crisp images across a 150 arcsecond (2½ arcminutes) field. Furthermore, space telescopes can study the universe across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, most of which is blocked by Earth's atmosphere. Finally, the background sky is darker in space than on the ground, because air absorbs solar energy during the day and then releases it at night, producing a faint—but nevertheless discernible—airglow that washes out low-contrast astronomical objects.[279]

Left: image taken by Hubble (2017) vs Right: the image taken by Webb (2022)[280]
 
 

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hubble, space, telescope, hubble, redirects, here, other, uses, hubble, disambiguation, often, referred, hubble, space, telescope, that, launched, into, earth, orbit, 1990, remains, operation, first, space, telescope, largest, most, versatile, renowned, both, . Hubble redirects here For other uses see Hubble disambiguation The Hubble Space Telescope often referred to as HST or Hubble is a space telescope that was launched into low Earth orbit in 1990 and remains in operation It was not the first space telescope but it is one of the largest and most versatile renowned both as a vital research tool and as a public relations boon for astronomy The Hubble telescope is named after astronomer Edwin Hubble and is one of NASA s Great Observatories The Space Telescope Science Institute STScI selects Hubble s targets and processes the resulting data while the Goddard Space Flight Center GSFC controls the spacecraft 8 Hubble Space TelescopeSeen in orbit from the departing Space Shuttle Atlantis in 2009 flying Servicing Mission 4 STS 125 the fifth and final Hubble mission NamesHST HubbleMission typeAstronomyOperatorSTScICOSPAR ID1990 037BSATCAT no 20580Websitenasa wbr gov wbr hubble hubblesite wbr org spacetelescope wbr orgMission duration32 years 9 months and 21 days ongoing 1 Spacecraft propertiesManufacturerLockheed Martin spacecraft Perkin Elmer optics Launch mass11 110 kg 24 490 lb 2 Dimensions13 2 m 4 2 m 43 ft 14 ft 2 Power2 800 wattsStart of missionLaunch dateApril 24 1990 12 33 51 UTC 3 RocketSpace Shuttle Discovery STS 31 Launch siteKennedy LC 39BContractorRockwell InternationalDeployment dateApril 25 1990 2 Entered serviceMay 20 1990 2 End of missionDecay date2030 2040 estimated 4 Orbital parametersReference systemGeocentric orbit 5 RegimeLow Earth orbitPeriapsis altitude537 0 km 333 7 mi Apoapsis altitude540 9 km 336 1 mi Inclination28 47 Period95 42 minutesMain telescopeTypeRitchey Chretien reflectorDiameter2 4 m 7 ft 10 in 6 Focal length57 6 m 189 ft 6 Focal ratiof 24Collecting area4 0 m2 43 sq ft 7 WavelengthsNear infrared visible light ultravioletInstrumentsNICMOSNear Infrared Camera and Multi Object SpectrometerACSAdvanced Camera for SurveysWFC3Wide Field Camera 3COSCosmic Origins SpectrographSTISSpace Telescope Imaging SpectrographFGSFine Guidance Sensor Hubble features a 2 4 m 7 ft 10 in mirror and its five main instruments observe in the ultraviolet visible and near infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum Hubble s orbit outside the distortion of Earth s atmosphere allows it to capture extremely high resolution images with substantially lower background light than ground based telescopes It has recorded some of the most detailed visible light images allowing a deep view into space Many Hubble observations have led to breakthroughs in astrophysics such as determining the rate of expansion of the universe Space telescopes were proposed as early as 1923 and the Hubble telescope was funded and built in the 1970s by the United States space agency NASA with contributions from the European Space Agency Its intended launch was in 1983 but the project was beset by technical delays budget problems and the 1986 Challenger disaster Hubble was finally launched in 1990 but its main mirror had been ground incorrectly resulting in spherical aberration that compromised the telescope s capabilities The optics were corrected to their intended quality by a servicing mission in 1993 Hubble is the only telescope designed to be maintained in space by astronauts Five Space Shuttle missions have repaired upgraded and replaced systems on the telescope including all five of the main instruments The fifth mission was initially canceled on safety grounds following the Columbia disaster 2003 but after NASA administrator Michael D Griffin approved it the HST was completed in 2009 It completed 30 years of operation in April 2020 1 and is predicted to last until 2030 2040 4 Hubble forms the visible light component of NASA s Great Observatories program along with the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory the Chandra X ray Observatory and the Spitzer Space Telescope which covers the infrared bands 9 The mid IR to visible band successor to the Hubble telescope is the James Webb Space Telescope JWST which was launched on December 25 2021 with the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope due to follow in 2027 10 11 12 Contents 1 Conception design and aim 1 1 Proposals and precursors 1 2 Quest for funding 1 3 Construction and engineering 1 4 Optical tube assembly 1 5 Spacecraft systems 1 6 Computer systems and data processing 1 7 Initial instruments 1 8 Ground support 1 9 Challenger disaster delays and eventual launch 2 List of Hubble instruments 3 Flawed mirror 3 1 Origin of the problem 3 2 Design of a solution 4 Servicing missions and new instruments 4 1 Servicing overview 4 2 Servicing Mission 1 4 3 Servicing Mission 2 4 4 Servicing Mission 3A 4 5 Servicing Mission 3B 4 6 Servicing Mission 4 5 Major projects 5 1 Cosmic Assembly Near infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey 5 2 Frontier Fields program 5 3 Cosmic Evolution Survey COSMOS 6 Public use 6 1 Proposal process 6 2 Use by amateur astronomers 7 Scientific results 7 1 Key projects 7 2 Important discoveries 7 2 1 Age and expansion of the universe 7 2 2 Black holes 7 2 3 Extending visible wavelength images 7 2 4 Solar System discoveries 7 2 5 Supernova reappearance 7 2 6 Mass and size of Milky Way 7 2 7 Other discoveries 7 3 Impact on astronomy 7 4 Impact on aerospace engineering 8 Hubble data 8 1 Transmission to Earth 8 2 Color images 8 3 Archives 8 4 Pipeline reduction 8 5 Data analysis 9 Outreach activities 9 1 Celebration images 10 Equipment failures 10 1 Gyroscope rotation sensors 10 2 Instruments and electronics 10 2 1 2021 power control issue 11 Future 11 1 Orbital decay and controlled reentry 11 2 Possible service missions 11 3 Successors 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksConception design and aim EditProposals and precursors Edit Astronaut Owen Garriott working next to Skylab s crewed solar space observatory 1973 In 1923 Hermann Oberth considered a father of modern rocketry along with Robert H Goddard and Konstantin Tsiolkovsky published Die Rakete zu den Planetenraumen The Rocket into Planetary Space which mentioned how a telescope could be propelled into Earth orbit by a rocket 13 Lyman Spitzer played a major role in the birth of the Hubble Space Telescope project The history of the Hubble Space Telescope can be traced back as far as 1946 to astronomer Lyman Spitzer s paper entitled Astronomical advantages of an extraterrestrial observatory 14 In it he discussed the two main advantages that a space based observatory would have over ground based telescopes First the angular resolution the smallest separation at which objects can be clearly distinguished would be limited only by diffraction rather than by the turbulence in the atmosphere which causes stars to twinkle known to astronomers as seeing At that time ground based telescopes were limited to resolutions of 0 5 1 0 arcseconds compared to a theoretical diffraction limited resolution of about 0 05 arcsec for an optical telescope with a mirror 2 5 m 8 ft 2 in in diameter Second a space based telescope could observe infrared and ultraviolet light which are strongly absorbed by the atmosphere of Earth 14 Spitzer devoted much of his career to pushing for the development of a space telescope 15 In 1962 a report by the U S National Academy of Sciences recommended development of a space telescope as part of the space program and in 1965 Spitzer was appointed as head of a committee given the task of defining scientific objectives for a large space telescope 16 Dr Nancy Grace Roman with a model of the Large Space Telescope that was eventually developed as the Hubble Space Telescope While listed as a 1966 photo this design was not the standard until the mid 1970s Also crucial was the work of Nancy Grace Roman the Mother of Hubble 17 Well before it became an official NASA project she gave public lectures touting the scientific value of the telescope After it was approved she became the program scientist setting up the steering committee in charge of making astronomer needs feasible to implement 18 and writing testimony to Congress throughout the 1970s to advocate continued funding of the telescope 19 Her work as project scientist helped set the standards for NASA s operation of large scientific projects 20 Space based astronomy had begun on a very small scale following World War II as scientists made use of developments that had taken place in rocket technology The first ultraviolet spectrum of the Sun was obtained in 1946 21 and the NASA launched the Orbiting Solar Observatory OSO to obtain UV X ray and gamma ray spectra in 1962 22 An orbiting solar telescope was launched in 1962 by the United Kingdom as part of the Ariel programme and in 1966 NASA launched the first Orbiting Astronomical Observatory OAO mission OAO 1 s battery failed after three days terminating the mission It was followed by Orbiting Astronomical Observatory 2 OAO 2 which carried out ultraviolet observations of stars and galaxies from its launch in 1968 until 1972 well beyond its original planned lifetime of one year 23 The OSO and OAO missions demonstrated the important role space based observations could play in astronomy In 1968 NASA developed firm plans for a space based reflecting telescope with a mirror 3 m 9 8 ft in diameter known provisionally as the Large Orbiting Telescope or Large Space Telescope LST with a launch slated for 1979 These plans emphasized the need for crewed maintenance missions to the telescope to ensure such a costly program had a lengthy working life and the concurrent development of plans for the reusable Space Shuttle indicated that the technology to allow this was soon to become available 24 Quest for funding Edit The continuing success of the OAO program encouraged increasingly strong consensus within the astronomical community that the LST should be a major goal In 1970 NASA established two committees one to plan the engineering side of the space telescope project and the other to determine the scientific goals of the mission Once these had been established the next hurdle for NASA was to obtain funding for the instrument which would be far more costly than any Earth based telescope The U S Congress questioned many aspects of the proposed budget for the telescope and forced cuts in the budget for the planning stages which at the time consisted of very detailed studies of potential instruments and hardware for the telescope In 1974 public spending cuts led to Congress deleting all funding for the telescope project 25 In 1977 then NASA Administrator James C Fletcher proposed a token 5 million for Hubble in NASA s budget Then NASA Associate Administrator for Space Science Noel Hinners instead cut all funding for Hubble gambling that this would galvanize the scientific community into fighting for full funding As Hinners recalls 26 It was clear that year that we weren t going to be able to get a full up start There was some opposition on Capitol Hill to getting a new start on Hubble It was driven in large part as I recall by the budget situation Jim Fletcher proposed that we put in 5 million as a placeholder I didn t like that idea It was in today s vernacular a sop to the astronomy community There s something in there so all is well I figured in my own little head that to get that community energized we d be better off zeroing it out Then they would say Whoa we re in deep trouble and it would marshal the troops So I advocated that we not put anything in I don t remember any of the detailed discussions or whether there were any but Jim went along with that so we zeroed it out It had from my perspective the desired impact of stimulating the astronomy community to renew their efforts on the lobbying front While I like to think in hindsight it was a brilliant political move I m not sure I thought it through all that well It was something that was spur of the moment 5 million would let them think that all is well anyway but it s not So let s give them a message My own thinking get them stimulated to get into action Zeroing it out would certainly give that message I think it was as simple as that Didn t talk to anybody else about doing it first just Let s go do that Voila it worked Don t know whether I d do that again The political ploy worked In response to Hubble being zeroed out of NASA s budget a nationwide lobbying effort was coordinated among astronomers Many astronomers met congressmen and senators in person and large scale letter writing campaigns were organized The National Academy of Sciences published a report emphasizing the need for a space telescope and eventually the Senate agreed to half the budget that had originally been approved by Congress 27 The funding issues led to something of a reduction in the scale of the project with the proposed mirror diameter reduced from 3 m to 2 4 m both to cut costs 28 and to allow a more compact and effective configuration for the telescope hardware A proposed precursor 1 5 m 4 ft 11 in space telescope to test the systems to be used on the main satellite was dropped and budgetary concerns also prompted collaboration with the European Space Agency ESA ESA agreed to provide funding and supply one of the first generation instruments for the telescope as well as the solar cells that would power it and staff to work on the telescope in the United States in return for European astronomers being guaranteed at least 15 of the observing time on the telescope 29 Congress eventually approved funding of US 36 million for 1978 and the design of the LST began in earnest aiming for a launch date of 1983 27 In 1983 the telescope was named after Edwin Hubble 30 who confirmed one of the greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th century made by Georges Lemaitre that the universe is expanding 31 Construction and engineering Edit Grinding of Hubble s primary mirror at Perkin Elmer March 1979 Once the Space Telescope project had been given the go ahead work on the program was divided among many institutions Marshall Space Flight Center MSFC was given responsibility for the design development and construction of the telescope while Goddard Space Flight Center was given overall control of the scientific instruments and ground control center for the mission 32 MSFC commissioned the optics company Perkin Elmer to design and build the optical tube assembly OTA and Fine Guidance Sensors for the space telescope Lockheed was commissioned to construct and integrate the spacecraft in which the telescope would be housed 33 Optical tube assembly Edit Optically the HST is a Cassegrain reflector of Ritchey Chretien design as are most large professional telescopes This design with two hyperbolic mirrors is known for good imaging performance over a wide field of view with the disadvantage that the mirrors have shapes that are hard to fabricate and test The mirror and optical systems of the telescope determine the final performance and they were designed to exacting specifications Optical telescopes typically have mirrors polished to an accuracy of about a tenth of the wavelength of visible light but the Space Telescope was to be used for observations from the visible through the ultraviolet shorter wavelengths and was specified to be diffraction limited to take full advantage of the space environment Therefore its mirror needed to be polished to an accuracy of 10 nanometers or about 1 65 of the wavelength of red light 34 On the long wavelength end the OTA was not designed with optimum IR performance in mind for example the mirrors are kept at stable and warm about 15 C temperatures by heaters This limits Hubble s performance as an infrared telescope 35 The backup mirror by Kodak Its inner support structure can be seen because it is not coated with a reflective surface Perkin Elmer intended to use custom built and extremely sophisticated computer controlled polishing machines to grind the mirror to the required shape 33 However in case their cutting edge technology ran into difficulties NASA demanded that PE sub contract to Kodak to construct a back up mirror using traditional mirror polishing techniques 36 The team of Kodak and Itek also bid on the original mirror polishing work Their bid called for the two companies to double check each other s work which would have almost certainly caught the polishing error that later caused such problems 37 The Kodak mirror is now on permanent display at the National Air and Space Museum 38 39 An Itek mirror built as part of the effort is now used in the 2 4 m telescope at the Magdalena Ridge Observatory 40 Construction of the Perkin Elmer mirror began in 1979 starting with a blank manufactured by Corning from their ultra low expansion glass To keep the mirror s weight to a minimum it consisted of top and bottom plates each 25 mm 0 98 in thick sandwiching a honeycomb lattice Perkin Elmer simulated microgravity by supporting the mirror from the back with 130 rods that exerted varying amounts of force 41 This ensured the mirror s final shape would be correct and to specification when finally deployed Mirror polishing continued until May 1981 NASA reports at the time questioned Perkin Elmer s managerial structure and the polishing began to slip behind schedule and over budget To save money NASA halted work on the back up mirror and put the launch date of the telescope back to October 1984 42 The mirror was completed by the end of 1981 it was washed using 9 100 L 2 000 imp gal 2 400 US gal of hot deionized water and then received a reflective coating of 65 nm thick aluminum and a protective coating of 25 nm thick magnesium fluoride 35 43 The OTA metering truss and secondary baffle are visible in this image of Hubble during early construction Doubts continued to be expressed about Perkin Elmer s competence on a project of this importance as their budget and timescale for producing the rest of the OTA continued to inflate In response to a schedule described as unsettled and changing daily NASA postponed the launch date of the telescope until April 1985 Perkin Elmer s schedules continued to slip at a rate of about one month per quarter and at times delays reached one day for each day of work NASA was forced to postpone the launch date until March and then September 1986 By this time the total project budget had risen to US 1 175 billion 44 Spacecraft systems Edit The spacecraft in which the telescope and instruments were to be housed was another major engineering challenge It would have to withstand frequent passages from direct sunlight into the darkness of Earth s shadow which would cause major changes in temperature while being stable enough to allow extremely accurate pointing of the telescope A shroud of multi layer insulation keeps the temperature within the telescope stable and surrounds a light aluminum shell in which the telescope and instruments sit Within the shell a graphite epoxy frame keeps the working parts of the telescope firmly aligned 45 Because graphite composites are hygroscopic there was a risk that water vapor absorbed by the truss while in Lockheed s clean room would later be expressed in the vacuum of space resulting in the telescope s instruments being covered by ice To reduce that risk a nitrogen gas purge was performed before launching the telescope into space 46 While construction of the spacecraft in which the telescope and instruments would be housed proceeded somewhat more smoothly than the construction of the OTA Lockheed still experienced some budget and schedule slippage and by the summer of 1985 construction of the spacecraft was 30 over budget and three months behind schedule An MSFC report said Lockheed tended to rely on NASA directions rather than take their own initiative in the construction 47 Computer systems and data processing Edit DF 224 in Hubble before it was replaced in 1999 The two initial primary computers on the HST were the 1 25 MHz DF 224 system built by Rockwell Autonetics which contained three redundant CPUs and two redundant NSSC 1 NASA Standard Spacecraft Computer Model 1 systems developed by Westinghouse and GSFC using diode transistor logic DTL A co processor for the DF 224 was added during Servicing Mission 1 in 1993 which consisted of two redundant strings of an Intel based 80386 processor with an 80387 math co processor 48 The DF 224 and its 386 co processor were replaced by a 25 MHz Intel based 80486 processor system during Servicing Mission 3A in 1999 49 The new computer is 20 times faster with six times more memory than the DF 224 it replaced It increases throughput by moving some computing tasks from the ground to the spacecraft and saves money by allowing the use of modern programming languages 50 Additionally some of the science instruments and components had their own embedded microprocessor based control systems The MATs Multiple Access Transponder components MAT 1 and MAT 2 utilize Hughes Aircraft CDP1802CD microprocessors 51 The Wide Field and Planetary Camera WFPC also utilized an RCA 1802 microprocessor or possibly the older 1801 version 52 The WFPC 1 was replaced by the WFPC 2 during Servicing Mission 1 in 1993 which was then replaced by the Wide Field Camera 3 WFC3 during Servicing Mission 4 in 2009 The upgrade extended Hubble s capability of seeing deeper into the universe and providing images in three broad regions of the spectrum 53 54 Initial instruments Edit Main articles Wide Field and Planetary Camera Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph High Speed Photometer Faint Object Camera and Faint Object Spectrograph Exploded view of the Hubble Space Telescope When launched the HST carried five scientific instruments the Wide Field and Planetary Camera WF PC Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph GHRS High Speed Photometer HSP Faint Object Camera FOC and the Faint Object Spectrograph FOS WF PC used a radial instrument bay and the other 4 instruments were each installed in an axial instrument bay 55 WF PC was a high resolution imaging device primarily intended for optical observations It was built by NASA s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and incorporated a set of 48 filters isolating spectral lines of particular astrophysical interest The instrument contained eight charge coupled device CCD chips divided between two cameras each using four CCDs Each CCD has a resolution of 0 64 megapixels 56 The wide field camera WFC covered a large angular field at the expense of resolution while the planetary camera PC took images at a longer effective focal length than the WF chips giving it a greater magnification 55 The Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph GHRS was a spectrograph designed to operate in the ultraviolet It was built by the Goddard Space Flight Center and could achieve a spectral resolution of 90 000 57 Also optimized for ultraviolet observations were the FOC and FOS which were capable of the highest spatial resolution of any instruments on Hubble Rather than CCDs these three instruments used photon counting digicons as their detectors The FOC was constructed by ESA while the University of California San Diego and Martin Marietta Corporation built the FOS 55 The final instrument was the HSP designed and built at the University of Wisconsin Madison It was optimized for visible and ultraviolet light observations of variable stars and other astronomical objects varying in brightness It could take up to 100 000 measurements per second with a photometric accuracy of about 2 or better 58 HST s guidance system can also be used as a scientific instrument Its three Fine Guidance Sensors FGS are primarily used to keep the telescope accurately pointed during an observation but can also be used to carry out extremely accurate astrometry measurements accurate to within 0 0003 arcseconds have been achieved 59 Ground support Edit Main article Space Telescope Science Institute Hubble Control Center at Goddard Space Flight Center 1999 The Space Telescope Science Institute STScI is responsible for the scientific operation of the telescope and the delivery of data products to astronomers STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy AURA and is physically located in Baltimore Maryland on the Homewood campus of Johns Hopkins University one of the 39 U S universities and seven international affiliates that make up the AURA consortium STScI was established in 1981 60 61 after something of a power struggle between NASA and the scientific community at large NASA had wanted to keep this function in house but scientists wanted it to be based in an academic establishment 62 63 The Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility ST ECF established at Garching bei Munchen near Munich in 1984 provided similar support for European astronomers until 2011 when these activities were moved to the European Space Astronomy Centre 64 One rather complex task that falls to STScI is scheduling observations for the telescope 65 Hubble is in a low Earth orbit to enable servicing missions but this means most astronomical targets are occulted by the Earth for slightly less than half of each orbit Observations cannot take place when the telescope passes through the South Atlantic Anomaly due to elevated radiation levels and there are also sizable exclusion zones around the Sun precluding observations of Mercury Moon and Earth The solar avoidance angle is about 50 to keep sunlight from illuminating any part of the OTA Earth and Moon avoidance keeps bright light out of the FGSs and keeps scattered light from entering the instruments If the FGSs are turned off the Moon and Earth can be observed Earth observations were used very early in the program to generate flat fields for the WFPC1 instrument There is a so called continuous viewing zone CVZ within roughly 24 of Hubble s orbital poles in which targets are not occulted for long periods 66 67 68 Hubble s low orbit means many targets are visible for slightly more than half of an orbit s elapsed time since they are blocked from view by the Earth for almost one half of each orbit Animation of Hubble s orbit from October 31 2018 to December 25 2018 Earth is not shown Due to the precession of the orbit the location of the CVZ moves slowly over a period of eight weeks Because the limb of the Earth is always within about 30 of regions within the CVZ the brightness of scattered earthshine may be elevated for long periods during CVZ observations Hubble orbits in low Earth orbit at an altitude of approximately 540 kilometers 340 mi and an inclination of 28 5 5 The position along its orbit changes over time in a way that is not accurately predictable The density of the upper atmosphere varies according to many factors and this means Hubble s predicted position for six weeks time could be in error by up to 4 000 km 2 500 mi Observation schedules are typically finalized only a few days in advance as a longer lead time would mean there was a chance the target would be unobservable by the time it was due to be observed 69 Engineering support for HST is provided by NASA and contractor personnel at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt Maryland 48 km 30 mi south of the STScI Hubble s operation is monitored 24 hours per day by four teams of flight controllers who make up Hubble s Flight Operations Team 65 Challenger disaster delays and eventual launch Edit STS 31 lifting off carrying Hubble into orbit Hubble being deployed from Discovery in 1990 By January 1986 the planned launch date for Hubble that October looked feasible but the Challenger disaster brought the U S space program to a halt grounded the Shuttle fleet and forced the launch to be postponed for several years During this delay the telescope had to be kept in a clean room powered up and purged with nitrogen until a launch could be rescheduled This costly situation about US 6 million per month pushed the overall costs of the project even higher This delay did allow time for engineers to perform extensive tests swap out a possibly failure prone battery and make other improvements 70 Furthermore the ground software needed to control Hubble was not ready in 1986 and was barely ready by the 1990 launch 71 Following the resumption of shuttle flights Space Shuttle Discovery successfully launched the Hubble on April 24 1990 as part of the STS 31 mission 72 At launch NASA had spent approximately US 4 7 billion in inflation adjusted 2010 dollars on the project 73 Hubble s cumulative costs are estimated to be about US 11 3 billion in 2015 dollars which include all subsequent servicing costs but not ongoing operations making it the most expensive science mission in NASA history 74 List of Hubble instruments EditHubble accommodates five science instruments at a given time plus the Fine Guidance Sensors which are mainly used for aiming the telescope but are occasionally used for scientific astrometry measurements Early instruments were replaced with more advanced ones during the Shuttle servicing missions COSTAR was a corrective optics device rather than a science instrument but occupied one of the four axial instrument bays Since the final servicing mission in 2009 the four active instruments have been ACS COS STIS and WFC3 NICMOS is kept in hibernation but may be revived if WFC3 were to fail in the future Advanced Camera for Surveys ACS 2002 present Cosmic Origins Spectrograph COS 2009 present Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement COSTAR 1993 2009 Faint Object Camera FOC 1990 2002 Faint Object Spectrograph FOS 1990 1997 Fine Guidance Sensor FGS 1990 present Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph GHRS HRS 1990 1997 High Speed Photometer HSP 1990 1993 Near Infrared Camera and Multi Object Spectrometer NICMOS 1997 present hibernating since 2008 Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph STIS 1997 present non operative 2004 2009 Wide Field and Planetary Camera WFPC 1990 1993 Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 WFPC2 1993 2009 Wide Field Camera 3 WFC3 2009 present Of the former instruments three COSTAR FOS and WFPC2 are displayed in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum 75 76 77 The FOC is in the Dornier museum Germany 78 The HSP is in the Space Place at the University of Wisconsin Madison 79 The first WFPC was dismantled and some components were then re used in WFC3 80 81 Flawed mirror Edit An extract from a WF PC image shows the light from a star spread over a wide area instead of being concentrated on a few pixels Within weeks of the launch of the telescope the returned images indicated a serious problem with the optical system Although the first images appeared to be sharper than those of ground based telescopes Hubble failed to achieve a final sharp focus and the best image quality obtained was drastically lower than expected Images of point sources spread out over a radius of more than one arcsecond instead of having a point spread function PSF concentrated within a circle 0 1 arcseconds 485 nrad in diameter as had been specified in the design criteria 82 83 Analysis of the flawed images revealed that the primary mirror had been polished to the wrong shape Although it was believed to be one of the most precisely figured optical mirrors ever made smooth to about 10 nanometers 34 the outer perimeter was too flat by about 2200 nanometers about 1 450 mm or 1 11000 inch 84 This difference was catastrophic introducing severe spherical aberration a flaw in which light reflecting off the edge of a mirror focuses on a different point from the light reflecting off its center 85 The effect of the mirror flaw on scientific observations depended on the particular observation the core of the aberrated PSF was sharp enough to permit high resolution observations of bright objects and spectroscopy of point sources was affected only through a sensitivity loss However the loss of light to the large out of focus halo severely reduced the usefulness of the telescope for faint objects or high contrast imaging This meant nearly all the cosmological programs were essentially impossible since they required observation of exceptionally faint objects 85 This led politicians to question NASA s competence scientists to rue the cost which could have gone to more productive endeavors and comedians to make jokes about NASA and the telescope In the 1991 comedy The Naked Gun 2 The Smell of Fear in a scene where historical disasters are displayed Hubble is pictured with RMS Titanic and LZ 129 Hindenburg 86 87 Nonetheless during the first three years of the Hubble mission before the optical corrections the telescope still carried out a large number of productive observations of less demanding targets 88 The error was well characterized and stable enabling astronomers to partially compensate for the defective mirror by using sophisticated image processing techniques such as deconvolution 89 Origin of the problem Edit Optical evolution of Hubble s primary camera system These images show spiral galaxy M100 as seen with WFPC1 in 1993 before corrective optics left with WFPC2 in 1994 after correction center and with WFC3 in 2018 right A commission headed by Lew Allen director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory was established to determine how the error could have arisen The Allen Commission found that a reflective null corrector a testing device used to achieve a properly shaped non spherical mirror had been incorrectly assembled one lens was out of position by 1 3 mm 0 051 in 90 During the initial grinding and polishing of the mirror Perkin Elmer analyzed its surface with two conventional refractive null correctors However for the final manufacturing step figuring they switched to the custom built reflective null corrector designed explicitly to meet very strict tolerances The incorrect assembly of this device resulted in the mirror being ground very precisely but to the wrong shape A few final tests using the conventional null correctors correctly reported spherical aberration But these results were dismissed thus missing the opportunity to catch the error because the reflective null corrector was considered more accurate 91 The commission blamed the failings primarily on Perkin Elmer Relations between NASA and the optics company had been severely strained during the telescope construction due to frequent schedule slippage and cost overruns NASA found that Perkin Elmer did not review or supervise the mirror construction adequately did not assign its best optical scientists to the project as it had for the prototype and in particular did not involve the optical designers in the construction and verification of the mirror While the commission heavily criticized Perkin Elmer for these managerial failings NASA was also criticized for not picking up on the quality control shortcomings such as relying totally on test results from a single instrument 92 Design of a solution Edit Many feared that Hubble would be abandoned 93 The design of the telescope had always incorporated servicing missions and astronomers immediately began to seek potential solutions to the problem that could be applied at the first servicing mission scheduled for 1993 While Kodak had ground a back up mirror for Hubble it would have been impossible to replace the mirror in orbit and too expensive and time consuming to bring the telescope back to Earth for a refit Instead the fact that the mirror had been ground so precisely to the wrong shape led to the design of new optical components with exactly the same error but in the opposite sense to be added to the telescope at the servicing mission effectively acting as spectacles to correct the spherical aberration 94 95 The first step was a precise characterization of the error in the main mirror Working backwards from images of point sources astronomers determined that the conic constant of the mirror as built was 1 01390 0 0002 instead of the intended 1 00230 96 97 The same number was also derived by analyzing the null corrector used by Perkin Elmer to figure the mirror as well as by analyzing interferograms obtained during ground testing of the mirror 98 COSTAR being removed in 2009 Because of the way the HST s instruments were designed two different sets of correctors were required The design of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 already planned to replace the existing WF PC included relay mirrors to direct light onto the four separate charge coupled device CCD chips making up its two cameras An inverse error built into their surfaces could completely cancel the aberration of the primary However the other instruments lacked any intermediate surfaces that could be configured in this way and so required an external correction device 99 The Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement COSTAR system was designed to correct the spherical aberration for light focused at the FOC FOS and GHRS It consists of two mirrors in the light path with one ground to correct the aberration 100 To fit the COSTAR system onto the telescope one of the other instruments had to be removed and astronomers selected the High Speed Photometer to be sacrificed 99 By 2002 all the original instruments requiring COSTAR had been replaced by instruments with their own corrective optics 101 COSTAR was removed and returned to Earth in 2009 where it is exhibited at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C 102 The area previously used by COSTAR is now occupied by the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph 103 Servicing missions and new instruments EditServicing overview Edit Hubble was designed to accommodate regular servicing and equipment upgrades while in orbit Instruments and limited life items were designed as orbital replacement units 104 Five servicing missions SM 1 2 3A 3B and 4 were flown by NASA Space Shuttles the first in December 1993 and the last in May 2009 105 Servicing missions were delicate operations that began with maneuvering to intercept the telescope in orbit and carefully retrieving it with the shuttle s mechanical arm The necessary work was then carried out in multiple tethered spacewalks over a period of four to five days After a visual inspection of the telescope astronauts conducted repairs replaced failed or degraded components upgraded equipment and installed new instruments Once work was completed the telescope was redeployed typically after boosting to a higher orbit to address the orbital decay caused by atmospheric drag 106 Servicing Mission 1 Edit Main article STS 61 Astronauts Musgrave and Hoffman install corrective optics during SM1 The first Hubble servicing mission was scheduled for 1993 before the mirror problem was discovered It assumed greater importance as the astronauts would need to do extensive work to install corrective optics failure would have resulted in either abandoning Hubble or accepting its permanent disability Other components failed before the mission causing the repair cost to rise to 500 million not including the cost of the shuttle flight A successful repair would help demonstrate the viability of building Space Station Alpha 107 STS 49 in 1992 demonstrated the difficulty of space work While its rescue of Intelsat 603 received praise the astronauts had taken possibly reckless risks in doing so Neither the rescue nor the unrelated assembly of prototype space station components occurred as the astronauts had trained causing NASA to reassess planning and training including for the Hubble repair The agency assigned to the mission Story Musgrave who had worked on satellite repair procedures since 1976 and six other experienced astronauts including two from STS 49 The first mission director since Project Apollo would coordinate a crew with 16 previous shuttle flights The astronauts were trained to use about a hundred specialized tools 108 Heat had been the problem on prior spacewalks which occurred in sunlight Hubble needed to be repaired out of sunlight Musgrave discovered during vacuum training seven months before the mission that spacesuit gloves did not sufficiently protect against the cold of space After STS 57 confirmed the issue in orbit NASA quickly changed equipment procedures and flight plan Seven total mission simulations occurred before launch the most thorough preparation in shuttle history No complete Hubble mockup existed so the astronauts studied many separate models including one at the Smithsonian and mentally combined their varying and contradictory details 109 Service Mission 1 flew aboard Endeavour in December 1993 and involved installation of several instruments and other equipment over ten days Most importantly the High Speed Photometer was replaced with the COSTAR corrective optics package and WF PC was replaced with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 WFPC2 with an internal optical correction system The solar arrays and their drive electronics were also replaced as well as four gyroscopes in the telescope pointing system two electrical control units and other electrical components and two magnetometers The onboard computers were upgraded with added coprocessors and Hubble s orbit was boosted 84 On January 13 1994 NASA declared the mission a complete success and showed the first sharper images 110 The mission was one of the most complex performed up until that date involving five long extra vehicular activity periods Its success was a boon for NASA as well as for the astronomers who now had a more capable space telescope 76 111 Servicing Mission 2 Edit Main article STS 82 Hubble as seen from Discovery during its second servicing mission Servicing Mission 2 flown by Discovery in February 1997 replaced the GHRS and the FOS with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph STIS and the Near Infrared Camera and Multi Object Spectrometer NICMOS replaced an Engineering and Science Tape Recorder with a new Solid State Recorder and repaired thermal insulation 112 NICMOS contained a heat sink of solid nitrogen to reduce the thermal noise from the instrument but shortly after it was installed an unexpected thermal expansion resulted in part of the heat sink coming into contact with an optical baffle This led to an increased warming rate for the instrument and reduced its original expected lifetime of 4 5 years to about two years 113 Servicing Mission 3A Edit Main article STS 103 Servicing Mission 3A flown by Discovery took place in December 1999 and was a split off from Servicing Mission 3 after three of the six onboard gyroscopes had failed The fourth failed a few weeks before the mission rendering the telescope incapable of performing scientific observations The mission replaced all six gyroscopes replaced a Fine Guidance Sensor and the computer installed a Voltage temperature Improvement Kit VIK to prevent battery overcharging and replaced thermal insulation blankets 114 Servicing Mission 3B Edit Main article STS 109 Servicing Mission 3B flown by Columbia in March 2002 saw the installation of a new instrument with the FOC which except for the Fine Guidance Sensors when used for astrometry was the last of the original instruments being replaced by the Advanced Camera for Surveys ACS This meant COSTAR was no longer required since all new instruments had built in correction for the main mirror aberration 101 The mission also revived NICMOS by installing a closed cycle cooler 113 and replaced the solar arrays for the second time providing 30 percent more power 115 Servicing Mission 4 Edit Main article STS 125 Hubble during Servicing Mission 4 Hubble after release Plans called for Hubble to be serviced in February 2005 but the Columbia disaster in 2003 in which the orbiter disintegrated on re entry into the atmosphere had wide ranging effects to the Hubble program and other NASA missions NASA Administrator Sean O Keefe decided all future shuttle missions had to be able to reach the safe haven of the International Space Station should in flight problems develop As no shuttles were capable of reaching both HST and the space station during the same mission future crewed service missions were canceled 116 This decision was criticised by numerous astronomers who felt Hubble was valuable enough to merit the human risk 117 HST s planned successor the James Webb Space Telescope JWST by 2004 was not expected to launch until at least 2011 JWST was eventually launched in December 2021 118 A gap in space observing capabilities between a decommissioning of Hubble and the commissioning of a successor was of major concern to many astronomers given the significant scientific impact of HST 119 The consideration that JWST will not be located in low Earth orbit and therefore cannot be easily upgraded or repaired in the event of an early failure only made concerns more acute On the other hand NASA officials were concerned that continuing to service Hubble would consume funds from other programs and delay the JWST 120 In January 2004 O Keefe said he would review his decision to cancel the final servicing mission to HST due to public outcry and requests from Congress for NASA to look for a way to save it The National Academy of Sciences convened an official panel which recommended in July 2004 that the HST should be preserved despite the apparent risks Their report urged NASA should take no actions that would preclude a space shuttle servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope 121 In August 2004 O Keefe asked Goddard Space Flight Center to prepare a detailed proposal for a robotic service mission These plans were later canceled the robotic mission being described as not feasible 122 In late 2004 several Congressional members led by Senator Barbara Mikulski held public hearings and carried on a fight with much public support including thousands of letters from school children across the U S to get the Bush Administration and NASA to reconsider the decision to drop plans for a Hubble rescue mission 123 Nickel hydrogen battery pack for Hubble The nomination in April 2005 of a new NASA Administrator Michael D Griffin changed the situation as Griffin stated he would consider a crewed servicing mission 124 Soon after his appointment Griffin authorized Goddard to proceed with preparations for a crewed Hubble maintenance flight saying he would make the final decision after the next two shuttle missions In October 2006 Griffin gave the final go ahead and the 11 day mission by Atlantis was scheduled for October 2008 Hubble s main data handling unit failed in September 2008 125 halting all reporting of scientific data until its back up was brought online on October 25 2008 126 Since a failure of the backup unit would leave the HST helpless the service mission was postponed to incorporate a replacement for the primary unit 125 Servicing Mission 4 SM4 flown by Atlantis in May 2009 was the last scheduled shuttle mission for HST 103 127 SM4 installed the replacement data handling unit repaired the ACS and STIS systems installed improved nickel hydrogen batteries and replaced other components including all six gyroscopes SM4 also installed two new observation instruments Wide Field Camera 3 WFC3 and the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph COS 128 and the Soft Capture and Rendezvous System which will enable the future rendezvous capture and safe disposal of Hubble by either a crewed or robotic mission 129 Except for the ACS s High Resolution Channel which could not be repaired and was disabled 130 131 132 the work accomplished during SM4 rendered the telescope fully functional 103 Major projects Edit One of Hubble s most famous images Pillars of Creation shows stars forming in the Eagle Nebula Since the start of the program a number of research projects have been carried out some of them almost solely with Hubble others coordinated facilities such as Chandra X ray Observatory and ESO s Very Large Telescope Although the Hubble observatory is nearing the end of its life there are still major projects scheduled for it One example is the current 2022 ULLYSES project Ultraviolet Legacy Library of Young Stars as Essential Standards which will last for three years to observe a set of high and low mass young stars and will shed light on star formation and composition Cosmic Assembly Near infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey Edit In an August 2013 press release CANDELS was referred to as the largest project in the history of Hubble The survey aims to explore galactic evolution in the early Universe and the very first seeds of cosmic structure at less than one billion years after the Big Bang 133 The CANDELS project site describes the survey s goals as the following 134 The Cosmic Assembly Near IR Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey is designed to document the first third of galactic evolution from z 8 to 1 5 via deep imaging of more than 250 000 galaxies with WFC3 IR and ACS It will also find the first Type Ia SNe beyond z gt 1 5 and establish their accuracy as standard candles for cosmology Five premier multi wavelength sky regions are selected each has multi wavelength data from Spitzer and other facilities and has extensive spectroscopy of the brighter galaxies The use of five widely separated fields mitigates cosmic variance and yields statistically robust and complete samples of galaxies down to 109 solar masses out to z 8 Frontier Fields program Edit The Frontier Fields program studied MACS0416 1 2403 The program officially named Hubble Deep Fields Initiative 2012 is aimed to advance the knowledge of early galaxy formation by studying high redshift galaxies in blank fields with the help of gravitational lensing to see the faintest galaxies in the distant universe 135 The Frontier Fields web page describes the goals of the program being to reveal hitherto inaccessible populations of z 5 10 galaxies that are ten to fifty times fainter intrinsically than any presently known to solidify our understanding of the stellar masses and star formation histories of sub L galaxies at the earliest times to provide the first statistically meaningful morphological characterization of star forming galaxies at z gt 5 to find z gt 8 galaxies stretched out enough by cluster lensing to discern internal structure and or magnified enough by cluster lensing for spectroscopic follow up 136 Cosmic Evolution Survey COSMOS Edit The Cosmic Evolution Survey COSMOS 137 is an astronomical survey designed to probe the formation and evolution of galaxies as a function of both cosmic time redshift and the local galaxy environment The survey covers a two square degree equatorial field with spectroscopy and X ray to radio imaging by most of the major space based telescopes and a number of large ground based telescopes 138 making it a key focus region of extragalactic astrophysics COSMOS was launched in 2006 as the largest project pursued by the Hubble Space Telescope at the time and still is the largest continuous area of sky covered for the purposes of mapping deep space in blank fields 2 5 times the area of the moon on the sky and 17 times larger than the largest of the CANDELS regions The COSMOS scientific collaboration that was forged from the initial COSMOS survey is the largest and longest running extragalactic collaboration known for its collegiality and openness The study of galaxies in their environment can be done only with large areas of the sky larger than a half square degree 139 More than two million galaxies are detected spanning 90 of the age of the Universe The COSMOS collaboration is led by Caitlin Casey Jeyhan Kartaltepe and Vernesa Smolcic and involves more than 200 scientists in a dozen countries 137 Public use EditProposal process Edit Star cluster Pismis 24 with nebula Anyone can apply for time on the telescope there are no restrictions on nationality or academic affiliation but funding for analysis is available only to U S institutions 140 Competition for time on the telescope is intense with about one fifth of the proposals submitted in each cycle earning time on the schedule 141 142 Calls for proposals are issued roughly annually with time allocated for a cycle lasting about one year Proposals are divided into several categories general observer proposals are the most common covering routine observations Snapshot observations are those in which targets require only 45 minutes or less of telescope time including overheads such as acquiring the target Snapshot observations are used to fill in gaps in the telescope schedule that cannot be filled by regular general observer programs 143 Astronomers may make Target of Opportunity proposals in which observations are scheduled if a transient event covered by the proposal occurs during the scheduling cycle In addition up to 10 of the telescope time is designated director s discretionary DD time Astronomers can apply to use DD time at any time of year and it is typically awarded for study of unexpected transient phenomena such as supernovae 144 Other uses of DD time have included the observations that led to views of the Hubble Deep Field and Hubble Ultra Deep Field and in the first four cycles of telescope time observations that were carried out by amateur astronomers 145 146 In 2012 the ESA held a contest for public image processing of Hubble data to encourage the discovery of hidden treasures in the raw Hubble data 147 148 Use by amateur astronomers Edit The HST is sometimes visible from the ground as in this 39 second exposure when it is in Orion Maximum brightness about magnitude 1 The first director of STScI Riccardo Giacconi announced in 1986 that he intended to devote some of his director discretionary time to allowing amateur astronomers to use the telescope The total time to be allocated was only a few hours per cycle but excited great interest among amateur astronomers 145 146 Proposals for amateur time were stringently reviewed by a committee of amateur astronomers and time was awarded only to proposals that were deemed to have genuine scientific merit did not duplicate proposals made by professionals and required the unique capabilities of the space telescope Thirteen amateur astronomers were awarded time on the telescope with observations being carried out between 1990 and 1997 145 One such study was Transition Comets UV Search for OH The first proposal A Hubble Space Telescope Study of Posteclipse Brightening and Albedo Changes on Io was published in Icarus 149 a journal devoted to solar system studies A second study from another group of amateurs was also published in Icarus 150 After that time however budget reductions at STScI made the support of work by amateur astronomers untenable and no additional amateur programs have been carried out 145 146 Regular Hubble proposals still include findings or discovered objects by amateurs and citizen scientists These observations are often in a collaboration with professional astronomers One of earliest such observations is the Great White Spot of 1990 151 on planet Saturn discovered by amateur astronomer S Wilber 152 and observed by HST under a proposal by J Westphal Caltech 153 154 Later professional amateur observations by Hubble include discoveries by the Galaxy Zoo project such as Voorwerpjes and Green Pea galaxies 155 156 The Gems of the Galaxies program is based on a list of objects by galaxy zoo volunteers that was shortened with the help of an online vote 157 Additionally there are observations of minor planets discovered by amateur astronomers such as 2I Borisov and changes in the atmosphere of the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn or the ice giants Uranus and Neptune 158 159 In the pro am collaboration backyard worlds the HST was used to observe a planetary mass object called WISE J0830 2837 The non detection by the HST helped to classify this peculiar object 160 Scientific results Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Hubble Legacy Field 50 second video Key projects Edit In the early 1980s NASA and STScI convened four panels to discuss key projects These were projects that were both scientifically important and would require significant telescope time which would be explicitly dedicated to each project This guaranteed that these particular projects would be completed early in case the telescope failed sooner than expected The panels identified three such projects 1 a study of the nearby intergalactic medium using quasar absorption lines to determine the properties of the intergalactic medium and the gaseous content of galaxies and groups of galaxies 161 2 a medium deep survey using the Wide Field Camera to take data whenever one of the other instruments was being used 162 and 3 a project to determine the Hubble constant within ten percent by reducing the errors both external and internal in the calibration of the distance scale 163 Important discoveries Edit Hubble Extreme Deep Field image of space in the constellation Fornax Hubble has helped resolve some long standing problems in astronomy while also raising new questions Some results have required new theories to explain them Age and expansion of the universe Edit Among its primary mission targets was to measure distances to Cepheid variable stars more accurately than ever before and thus constrain the value of the Hubble constant the measure of the rate at which the universe is expanding which is also related to its age Before the launch of HST estimates of the Hubble constant typically had errors of up to 50 but Hubble measurements of Cepheid variables in the Virgo Cluster and other distant galaxy clusters provided a measured value with an accuracy of 10 which is consistent with other more accurate measurements made since Hubble s launch using other techniques 164 The estimated age is now about 13 7 billion years but before the Hubble Telescope scientists predicted an age ranging from 10 to 20 billion years 165 While Hubble helped to refine estimates of the age of the universe it also upended theories about its future Astronomers from the High z Supernova Search Team and the Supernova Cosmology Project used ground based telescopes and HST to observe distant supernovae and uncovered evidence that far from decelerating under the influence of gravity the expansion of the universe is instead accelerating Three members of these two groups have subsequently been awarded Nobel Prizes for their discovery 166 The cause of this acceleration remains poorly understood 167 the term used for the currently unknown cause is dark energy signifying that it is dark unable to be directly seen and detected to our current scientific instruments 168 An illustration of a black hole Black holes Edit The high resolution spectra and images provided by the HST have been especially well suited to establishing the prevalence of black holes in the center of nearby galaxies While it had been hypothesized in the early 1960s that black holes would be found at the centers of some galaxies and astronomers in the 1980s identified a number of good black hole candidates work conducted with Hubble shows that black holes are probably common to the centers of all galaxies 169 The Hubble programs further established that the masses of the nuclear black holes and properties of the galaxies are closely related 170 171 Extending visible wavelength images Edit A unique window on the Universe enabled by Hubble are the Hubble Deep Field Hubble Ultra Deep Field and Hubble Extreme Deep Field images which used Hubble s unmatched sensitivity at visible wavelengths to create images of small patches of sky that are the deepest ever obtained at optical wavelengths The images reveal galaxies billions of light years away thereby providing information about the early Universe and have accordingly generated a wealth of scientific papers The Wide Field Camera 3 improved the view of these fields in the infrared and ultraviolet supporting the discovery of some of the most distant objects yet discovered such as MACS0647 JD 172 The non standard object SCP 06F6 was discovered by the Hubble Space Telescope in February 2006 173 174 On March 3 2016 researchers using Hubble data announced the discovery of the farthest confirmed galaxy to date GN z11 which Hubble observed as it existed roughly 400 million years after the Big Bang 175 The Hubble observations occurred on February 11 2015 and April 3 2015 as part of the CANDELS GOODS North surveys 176 177 Solar System discoveries Edit Hubble s STIS UV and ACS visible light combined to reveal Saturn s southern aurora Brown spots mark Comet Shoemaker Levy 9 impact sites on Jupiter s southern hemisphere Imaged by Hubble The collision of Comet Shoemaker Levy 9 with Jupiter in 1994 was fortuitously timed for astronomers coming just a few months after Servicing Mission 1 had restored Hubble s optical performance Hubble images of the planet were sharper than any taken since the passage of Voyager 2 in 1979 and were crucial in studying the dynamics of the collision of a large comet with Jupiter an event believed to occur once every few centuries 178 In March 2015 researchers announced that measurements of aurorae around Ganymede one of Jupiter s moons revealed that it has a subsurface ocean Using Hubble to study the motion of its aurorae the researchers determined that a large saltwater ocean was helping to suppress the interaction between Jupiter s magnetic field and that of Ganymede The ocean is estimated to be 100 km 60 mi deep trapped beneath a 150 km 90 mi ice crust 179 180 HST has also been used to study objects in the outer reaches of the Solar System including the dwarf planets Pluto 181 Eris 182 and Sedna 183 During June and July 2012 U S astronomers using Hubble discovered Styx a tiny fifth moon orbiting Pluto 184 From June to August 2015 Hubble was used to search for a Kuiper belt object KBO target for the New Horizons Kuiper Belt Extended Mission KEM when similar searches with ground telescopes failed to find a suitable target 185 This resulted in the discovery of at least five new KBOs including the eventual KEM target 486958 Arrokoth that New Horizons performed a close fly by of on January 1 2019 186 187 188 In April 2022 NASA announced that astronomers were able to use images from HST to determine the size of the nucleus of comet C 2014 UN271 Bernardinelli Bernstein which is the largest icy comet nucleus ever seen by astronomers The nucleus of C 2014 UN271 has an estimated mass of 50 trillion tons which is 50 times the mass of other known comets in our solar system 189 Hubble and ALMA image of MACS J1149 5 2223 190 Supernova reappearance Edit On December 11 2015 Hubble captured an image of the first ever predicted reappearance of a supernova dubbed Refsdal which was calculated using different mass models of a galaxy cluster whose gravity is warping the supernova s light The supernova was previously seen in November 2014 behind galaxy cluster MACS J1149 5 2223 as part of Hubble s Frontier Fields program The light from the cluster took roughly five billion years to reach Earth while the light from the supernova behind it took five billion more years than that as measured by their respective redshifts Because of the gravitational effect of the galaxy cluster four images of the supernova appeared instead of one an example of an Einstein cross Based on early lens models a fifth image was predicted to reappear by the end of 2015 191 Refsdal reappeared as predicted in 2015 192 Mass and size of Milky Way Edit In March 2019 observations from Hubble and data from the European Space Agency s Gaia space observatory were combined to determine that the mass of the Milky Way Galaxy is approximately 1 5 trillion times the mass of the Sun a value intermediate between prior estimates 193 Other discoveries Edit Other discoveries made with Hubble data include proto planetary disks proplyds in the Orion Nebula 194 evidence for the presence of extrasolar planets around Sun like stars 195 and the optical counterparts of the still mysterious gamma ray bursts 196 Using gravitational lensing Hubble observed a galaxy designated MACS 2129 1 approximately 10 billion light years from Earth MACS 2129 1 subverted expectations about galaxies in which new star formation had ceased a significant result for understanding the formation of elliptical galaxies 197 In 2022 Hubble detected the light of the farthest individual star ever seen to date The star WHL0137 LS nicknamed Earendel existed within the first billion years after the big bang It will be observed by NASA s James Webb Space Telescope to confirm Earendel is indeed a star 198 Impact on astronomy Edit Evolution of detecting the early Universe Some of the Carina nebula by WFC3 Many objective measures show the positive impact of Hubble data on astronomy Over 15 000 papers based on Hubble data have been published in peer reviewed journals 199 and countless more have appeared in conference proceedings Looking at papers several years after their publication about one third of all astronomy papers have no citations while only two percent of papers based on Hubble data have no citations On average a paper based on Hubble data receives about twice as many citations as papers based on non Hubble data Of the 200 papers published each year that receive the most citations about 10 are based on Hubble data 200 Although the HST has clearly helped astronomical research its financial cost has been large A study on the relative astronomical benefits of different sizes of telescopes found that while papers based on HST data generate 15 times as many citations as a 4 m 13 ft ground based telescope such as the William Herschel Telescope the HST costs about 100 times as much to build and maintain 201 Deciding between building ground versus space based telescopes is complex Even before Hubble was launched specialized ground based techniques such as aperture masking interferometry had obtained higher resolution optical and infrared images than Hubble would achieve though restricted to targets about 108 times brighter than the faintest targets observed by Hubble 202 203 Since then advances in adaptive optics have extended the high resolution imaging capabilities of ground based telescopes to the infrared imaging of faint objects The usefulness of adaptive optics versus HST observations depends strongly on the particular details of the research questions being asked In the visible bands adaptive optics can correct only a relatively small field of view whereas HST can conduct high resolution optical imaging over a wider field 204 Moreover Hubble can image more faint objects since ground based telescopes are affected by the background of scattered light created by the Earth s atmosphere 205 Impact on aerospace engineering Edit In addition to its scientific results Hubble has also made significant contributions to aerospace engineering in particular the performance of systems in low Earth orbit LEO These insights result from Hubble s long lifetime on orbit extensive instrumentation and return of assemblies to the Earth where they can be studied in detail In particular Hubble has contributed to studies of the behavior of graphite composite structures in vacuum optical contamination from residual gas and human servicing radiation damage to electronics and sensors and the long term behavior of multi layer insulation 206 One lesson learned was that gyroscopes assembled using pressurized oxygen to deliver suspension fluid were prone to failure due to electric wire corrosion Gyroscopes are now assembled using pressurized nitrogen 207 Another is that optical surfaces in LEO can have surprisingly long lifetimes Hubble was only expected to last 15 years before the mirror became unusable but after 14 years there was no measureable degradation 117 Finally Hubble servicing missions particularly those that serviced components not designed for in space maintenance have contributed towards the development of new tools and techniques for on orbit repair 208 Hubble data Edit Hubble precision stellar distance measurement has been extended ten times further into the Milky Way 209 Transmission to Earth Edit Hubble data was initially stored on the spacecraft When launched the storage facilities were old fashioned reel to reel tape drives but these were replaced by solid state data storage facilities during servicing missions 2 and 3A About twice daily the Hubble Space Telescope radios data to a satellite in the geosynchronous Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System TDRSS which then downlinks the science data to one of two 60 foot 18 meter diameter high gain microwave antennas located at the White Sands Test Facility in White Sands New Mexico 142 From there they are sent to the Space Telescope Operations Control Center at Goddard Space Flight Center and finally to the Space Telescope Science Institute for archiving 142 Each week HST downlinks approximately 140 gigabits of data 2 Color images Edit Data analysis of a spectrum revealing the chemistry of hidden clouds All images from Hubble are monochromatic grayscale taken through a variety of filters each passing specific wavelengths of light and incorporated in each camera Color images are created by combining separate monochrome images taken through different filters This process can also create false color versions of images including infrared and ultraviolet channels where infrared is typically rendered as a deep red and ultraviolet is rendered as a deep blue 210 211 Archives Edit All Hubble data is eventually made available via the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes at STScI 212 CADC 213 and ESA ESAC 214 Data is usually proprietary available only to the principal investigator PI and astronomers designated by the PI for twelve months after being taken The PI can apply to the director of the STScI to extend or reduce the proprietary period in some circumstances 215 Observations made on Director s Discretionary Time are exempt from the proprietary period and are released to the public immediately Calibration data such as flat fields and dark frames are also publicly available straight away All data in the archive is in the FITS format which is suitable for astronomical analysis but not for public use 216 The Hubble Heritage Project processes and releases to the public a small selection of the most striking images in JPEG and TIFF formats 217 Pipeline reduction Edit Astronomical data taken with CCDs must undergo several calibration steps before they are suitable for astronomical analysis STScI has developed sophisticated software that automatically calibrates data when they are requested from the archive using the best calibration files available This on the fly processing means large data requests can take a day or more to be processed and returned The process by which data is calibrated automatically is known as pipeline reduction and is increasingly common at major observatories Astronomers may if they wish retrieve the calibration files themselves and run the pipeline reduction software locally This may be desirable when calibration files other than those selected automatically need to be used 218 Data analysis Edit Hubble data can be analyzed using many different packages STScI maintains the custom made Space Telescope Science Data Analysis System STSDAS software which contains all the programs needed to run pipeline reduction on raw data files as well as many other astronomical image processing tools tailored to the requirements of Hubble data The software runs as a module of IRAF a popular astronomical data reduction program 219 Outreach activities Edit In 2001 NASA polled internet users to find out what they would most like Hubble to observe they overwhelmingly selected the Horsehead Nebula One quarter scale model at the courthouse in Marshfield Missouri a hometown of Edwin Hubble NASA considered it important for the Space Telescope to capture the public s imagination given the considerable contribution of taxpayers to its construction and operational costs 220 After the difficult early years when the faulty mirror severely dented Hubble s reputation with the public the first servicing mission allowed its rehabilitation as the corrected optics produced numerous remarkable images 76 221 Several initiatives have helped to keep the public informed about Hubble activities In the United States outreach efforts are coordinated by the Space Telescope Science Institute STScI Office for Public Outreach which was established in 2000 to ensure that U S taxpayers saw the benefits of their investment in the space telescope program To that end STScI operates the HubbleSite org website The Hubble Heritage Project operating out of the STScI provides the public with high quality images of the most interesting and striking objects observed The Heritage team is composed of amateur and professional astronomers as well as people with backgrounds outside astronomy and emphasizes the aesthetic nature of Hubble images The Heritage Project is granted a small amount of time to observe objects which for scientific reasons may not have images taken at enough wavelengths to construct a full color image 217 Since 1999 the leading Hubble outreach group in Europe has been the Hubble European Space Agency Information Centre HEIC 222 This office was established at the Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility in Munich Germany HEIC s mission is to fulfill HST outreach and education tasks for the European Space Agency The work is centered on the production of news and photo releases that highlight interesting Hubble results and images These are often European in origin and so increase awareness of both ESA s Hubble share 15 and the contribution of European scientists to the observatory ESA produces educational material including a videocast series called Hubblecast designed to share world class scientific news with the public 223 The Hubble Space Telescope has won two Space Achievement Awards from the Space Foundation for its outreach activities in 2001 and 2010 224 A replica of the Hubble Space Telescope is on the courthouse lawn in Marshfield Missouri the hometown of namesake Edwin P Hubble 225 Celebration images Edit Further information List of Hubble anniversary images A pillar of gas and dust in the Carina Nebula This Wide Field Camera 3 image dubbed Mystic Mountain was released in 2010 to commemorate Hubble s 20th anniversary in space The Hubble Space Telescope celebrated its 20th anniversary in space on April 24 2010 To commemorate the occasion NASA ESA and the Space Telescope Science Institute STScI released an image from the Carina Nebula 226 To commemorate Hubble s 25th anniversary in space on April 24 2015 STScI released images of the Westerlund 2 cluster located about 20 000 light years 6 100 pc away in the constellation Carina through its Hubble 25 website 227 The European Space Agency created a dedicated 25th anniversary page on its website 228 In April 2016 a special celebratory image of the Bubble Nebula was released for Hubble s 26th birthday 229 Equipment failures EditGyroscope rotation sensors Edit HST uses gyroscopes to detect and measure any rotations so it can stabilize itself in orbit and point accurately and steadily at astronomical targets Three gyroscopes are normally required for operation observations are still possible with two or one but the area of sky that can be viewed would be somewhat restricted and observations requiring very accurate pointing are more difficult 230 In 2018 the plan was to drop into one gyroscope mode if fewer than three working gyroscopes were operational The gyroscopes are part of the Pointing Control System which uses five types of sensors magnetic sensors optical sensors and the gyroscopes and two types of actuators reaction wheels and magnetic torquers 231 After the Columbia disaster in 2003 it was unclear whether another servicing mission would be possible and gyroscope life became a concern again so engineers developed new software for two gyroscope and one gyroscope modes to maximize the potential lifetime The development was successful and in 2005 it was decided to switch to two gyroscope mode for regular telescope operations as a means of extending the lifetime of the mission The switch to this mode was made in August 2005 leaving Hubble with two gyroscopes in use two on backup and two inoperable 232 One more gyroscope failed in 2007 233 By the time of the final repair mission in May 2009 during which all six gyroscopes were replaced with two new pairs and one refurbished pair only three were still working Engineers determined that the gyroscope failures were caused by corrosion of electric wires powering the motor that was initiated by oxygen pressurized air used to deliver the thick suspending fluid 207 The new gyroscope models were assembled using pressurized nitrogen 207 and were expected to be much more reliable 234 In the 2009 servicing mission all six gyroscopes were replaced and after almost ten years only three gyroscopes failed and only after exceeding the average expected run time for the design 235 Of the six gyroscopes replaced in 2009 three were of the old design susceptible for flex lead failure and three were of the new design with a longer expected lifetime The first of the old style gyroscopes failed in March 2014 and the second in April 2018 On October 5 2018 the last of the old style gyroscopes failed and one of the new style gyroscopes was powered up from standby state However that reserve gyroscope did not immediately perform within operational limits and so the observatory was placed into safe mode while scientists attempted to fix the problem 236 237 NASA tweeted on October 22 2018 that the rotation rates produced by the backup gyro have reduced and are now within a normal range Additional tests are to be performed to ensure Hubble can return to science operations with this gyro 238 The solution that restored the backup new style gyroscope to operational range was widely reported as turning it off and on again 239 A running restart of the gyroscope was performed but this had no effect and the final resolution to the failure was more complex The failure was attributed to an inconsistency in the fluid surrounding the float within the gyroscope e g an air bubble On October 18 2018 the Hubble Operations Team directed the spacecraft into a series of maneuvers moving the spacecraft in opposite directions in order to mitigate the inconsistency Only after the maneuvers and a subsequent set of maneuvers on October 19 did the gyroscope truly operate within its normal range 240 Hubble views the Fomalhaut system This false color image was taken in October 2004 and July 2006 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys Instruments and electronics Edit Past servicing missions have exchanged old instruments for new ones avoiding failure and making new types of science possible Without servicing missions all the instruments will eventually fail In August 2004 the power system of the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph STIS failed rendering the instrument inoperable The electronics had originally been fully redundant but the first set of electronics failed in May 2001 241 This power supply was fixed during Servicing Mission 4 in May 2009 242 Similarly the Advanced Camera for Surveys ACS main camera primary electronics failed in June 2006 and the power supply for the backup electronics failed on January 27 2007 243 Only the instrument s Solar Blind Channel SBC was operable using the side 1 electronics A new power supply for the wide angle channel was added during SM 4 but quick tests revealed this did not help the high resolution channel 244 The Wide Field Channel WFC was returned to service by STS 125 in May 2009 but the High Resolution Channel HRC remains offline 245 On January 8 2019 Hubble entered a partial safe mode following suspected hardware problems in its most advanced instrument the Wide Field Camera 3 instrument NASA later reported that the cause of the safe mode within the instrument was a detection of voltage levels out of a defined range On January 15 2019 NASA said the cause of the failure was a software problem Engineering data within the telemetry circuits were not accurate In addition all other telemetry within those circuits also contained erroneous values indicating that this was a telemetry issue and not a power supply issue After resetting the telemetry circuits and associated boards the instrument began functioning again On January 17 2019 the device was returned to normal operation and on the same day it completed its first science observations 246 247 2021 power control issue Edit On June 13 2021 Hubble s payload computer halted due to a suspected issue with a memory module An attempt to restart the computer on June 14 failed Further attempts to switch to one of three other backup memory modules on board the spacecraft failed on June 18 On June 23 and 24 NASA engineers switched Hubble to a backup payload computer but these operations have failed as well with the same error On June 28 2021 NASA announced that it was extending the investigation to other components 248 249 Scientific operations were suspended while NASA worked to diagnose and resolve the issue 250 251 After identifying a malfunctioning power control unit PCU supplying power to one of Hubble s computers NASA was able to switch to a backup PCU and bring Hubble back to operational mode on July 16 252 253 254 255 On October 23 2021 HST instruments reported missing synchronization messages 256 and went into safe mode 257 By December 8 2021 NASA had restored full science operations and was developing updates to make instruments more resilient to missing synchronization messages 258 Future EditOrbital decay and controlled reentry Edit Illustration of the Soft Capture Mechanism SCM installed on Hubble Hubble orbits the Earth in the extremely tenuous upper atmosphere and over time its orbit decays due to drag If not reboosted it will re enter the Earth s atmosphere within some decades with the exact date depending on how active the Sun is and its impact on the upper atmosphere If Hubble were to descend in a completely uncontrolled re entry parts of the main mirror and its support structure would probably survive leaving the potential for damage or even human fatalities 259 In 2013 deputy project manager James Jeletic projected that Hubble could survive into the 2020s 4 Based on solar activity and atmospheric drag or lack thereof a natural atmospheric reentry for Hubble will occur between 2028 and 2040 4 260 In June 2016 NASA extended the service contract for Hubble until June 2021 261 In November 2021 NASA extended the service contract for Hubble until June 2026 262 NASA s original plan for safely de orbiting Hubble was to retrieve it using a Space Shuttle Hubble would then have most likely been displayed in the Smithsonian Institution This is no longer possible since the Space Shuttle fleet has been retired and would have been unlikely in any case due to the cost of the mission and risk to the crew Instead NASA considered adding an external propulsion module to allow controlled re entry 263 Ultimately in 2009 as part of Servicing Mission 4 the last servicing mission by the Space Shuttle NASA installed the Soft Capture Mechanism SCM to enable deorbit by either a crewed or robotic mission The SCM together with the Relative Navigation System RNS mounted on the Shuttle to collect data to enable NASA to pursue numerous options for the safe de orbit of Hubble constitute the Soft Capture and Rendezvous System SCRS 129 264 Possible service missions Edit As of 2017 update the Trump Administration was considering a proposal by the Sierra Nevada Corporation to use a crewed version of its Dream Chaser spacecraft to service Hubble some time in the 2020s both as a continuation of its scientific capabilities and as insurance against any malfunctions in the James Webb Space Telescope 265 In 2020 John Grunsfeld said that SpaceX Crew Dragon or Orion could perform another repair mission within ten years While robotic technology is not yet sophisticated enough he said with another crewed visit We could keep Hubble going for another few decades with new gyros and instruments 266 In September 2022 NASA and SpaceX signed a Space Act Agreement to investigate the possibility of launching a Crew Dragon mission to service and boost Hubble to a higher orbit possibly extending its lifespan by another 20 years 267 Successors Edit Further information James Webb Space Telescope See also List of proposed space observatories Visible spectrum range Color Wavelengthviolet 380 450 nmblue 450 475 nmcyan 476 495 nmgreen 495 570 nmyellow 570 590 nmorange 590 620 nmred 620 750 nmThere is no direct replacement to Hubble as an ultraviolet and visible light space telescope because near term space telescopes do not duplicate Hubble s wavelength coverage near ultraviolet to near infrared wavelengths instead concentrating on the further infrared bands These bands are preferred for studying high redshift and low temperature objects objects generally older and farther away in the universe These wavelengths are also difficult or impossible to study from the ground justifying the expense of a space based telescope Large ground based telescopes can image some of the same wavelengths as Hubble sometimes challenge HST in terms of resolution by using adaptive optics AO have much larger light gathering power and can be upgraded more easily but cannot yet match Hubble s excellent resolution over a wide field of view with the very dark background of space 204 205 Plans for a Hubble successor materialized as the Next Generation Space Telescope project which culminated in plans for the James Webb Space Telescope JWST the formal successor of Hubble 268 Very different from a scaled up Hubble it is designed to operate colder and farther away from the Earth at the L2 Lagrangian point where thermal and optical interference from the Earth and Moon are lessened It is not engineered to be fully serviceable such as replaceable instruments but the design includes a docking ring to enable visits from other spacecraft 269 A main scientific goal of JWST is to observe the most distant objects in the universe beyond the reach of existing instruments It is expected to detect stars in the early Universe approximately 280 million years older than stars HST now detects 270 The telescope is an international collaboration between NASA the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency since 1996 271 and was launched on December 25 2021 on an Ariane 5 rocket 272 Although JWST is primarily an infrared instrument its coverage extends down to 600 nm wavelength light or roughly orange in the visible spectrum A typical human eye can see to about 750 nm wavelength light so there is some overlap with the longest visible wavelength bands including orange and red light 273 Hubble and JWST mirrors 4 0 m2 and 25 m2 respectively A complementary telescope looking at even longer wavelengths than Hubble or JWST was the European Space Agency s Herschel Space Observatory launched on May 14 2009 Like JWST Herschel was not designed to be serviced after launch and had a mirror substantially larger than Hubble s but observed only in the far infrared and submillimeter It needed helium coolant of which it ran out on April 29 2013 274 Selected space telescopes and instruments 275 Name Year Wavelength ApertureHuman eye 0 39 0 75 mm 0 005 mSpitzer 2003 3 180 mm 0 85 mHubble STIS 1997 0 115 1 03 mm 2 4 mHubble WFC3 2009 0 2 1 7 mm 2 4 mHerschel 2009 55 672 mm 3 5 mJWST 2021 0 6 28 5 mm 6 5 mFurther concepts for advanced 21st century space telescopes include the Large Ultraviolet Optical Infrared Surveyor LUVOIR 276 a conceptualized 8 to 16 8 meters 310 to 660 inches optical space telescope that if realized could be a more direct successor to HST with the ability to observe and photograph astronomical objects in the visible ultraviolet and infrared wavelengths with substantially better resolution than Hubble or the Spitzer Space Telescope The final planning report prepared for the 2020 Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal Survey suggested a launch date of 2039 277 The Decadal Survey eventually recommended that ideas for LUVOIR be combined with the Habitable Exoplanet Observer proposal to devise a new 6 meter flagship telescope that could launch in the 2040s 278 Existing ground based telescopes and various proposed Extremely Large Telescopes can exceed the HST in terms of sheer light gathering power and diffraction limit due to larger mirrors but other factors affect telescopes In some cases they may be able to match or exceed Hubble in resolution by using adaptive optics AO However AO on large ground based reflectors will not make Hubble and other space telescopes obsolete Most AO systems sharpen the view over a very narrow field Lucky Cam for example produces crisp 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