The Hubble Space Telescope should be back in action soon, following a tricky, remote repair job by NASA.

The orbiting observatory went dark in mid-June, with all astronomical viewing halted.

NASA initially suspected a 1980s-era computer as the source of the problem. But after the backup payload computer also failed, flight controllers at Maryland’s Goddard Space Flight Center focused on the science instruments’ bigger and more encompassing command and data unit, installed by spacewalking astronauts in 2009.

Engineers successfully switched to the backup equipment Thursday, and the crucial payload computer kicked in. NASA said Friday that science observations should resume quickly, if everything goes well.

A similar switch took place in 2008 after part of the older system failed.

“Congrats to the team!” NASA’s science mission chief Thomas Zurbuchen tweeted.

Launched in 1990, Hubble has made more than 1.5 million observations of the universe. NASA launched five repair missions to the telescope during the space shuttle program. The final tuneup was in 2009.

NASA plans to launch Hubble’s successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, by year’s end.


You May Also Like
Superconducting electrode controls spin waves in a magnet – Physics World

Superconducting electrode controls spin waves in a magnet – Physics World

Superconducting electrode controls spin waves in a magnet – Physics World Skip…

Astronauts Harvest First Chilli Peppers on International Space Station, Make Tacos With Them

NASA’s International Space Station (ISS) saw its first harvest of crops on…

Elon Musk Confirms Walter Isaacson Is Writing His Second Biography

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX apart from being a vocal…

Antarctica’s ‘deflated football’ fossil is world’s second-biggest egg

(Reuters) – A mysterious 68-million-year-old fossil found on Seymour Island off Antarctica’s…