 |
|
|
|
|
Is the HST Still Doing Good Science?
By Tim Hunter
|
Introduction- The Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is one of the most ambitious
scientific and exploratory enterprises in human history. The 2.4
meter Hubble Telescope was launched on April 24,1990 from the
Space Shuttle Discovery and deployed on April 25,1990. It cost
1.5 billion US dollars by the time of its launch, and it has
required four servicing missions (1993, 1997, 1999, 2002) to
correct its initial defective optics and to service and upgrade
equipment for routine maintenance and for replacement of
obsolete scientific instruments (Hubblesite, 2004). Hubble was
designed for a lifetime of 20 years.
HST is a large telescope, but its size is only modest compared
to many considerably larger ground based telescopes, several of
which are in the 6-10 meter range. The Hubble Telescope’s main
usefulness comes from it being above most of the Earth’s
atmosphere allowing it to have a far better resolving power than
ground based telescopes. It is never bothered by an unsteady
atmosphere and cloudy skies.
HST orbits at an altitude of 569 km inclined 28.50 to the
equator in a low Earth orbit. The Sun is dangerously too bright
for the HST to observe, and HST avoids Mercury and Venus which
are close to the Sun. HST has many instruments, but these will
not be discussed in this short essay other than to note they
cover the ultraviolet through the infrared portions (115-2500
nm) of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The Hubble Space Telescope is controlled from the Space
Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, MD. On a daily
basis, the HST takes 3 to 5 GB of data. The STScI makes
available to the scientific community on a daily basis between
10 to 15 GB of scientific data (HubbleSite, 2004). The
statistics for the Hubble Telescope as of March 2000 show it had
taken 330, 000 separate images of over 25, 000 astronomical
targets. In addition, as of March 2000, the HST data archive
consisted of more than 7.3 terabyte of data (HubbleSite, 2004). |
|
|
NEXT |
|
Back to Top | Essay List |
|