To return to consistent science operations, NASA is transitioning the spacecraft to a new operational mode it had long considered: Hubble will operate with only one gyro, while keeping another gyro available for future use. The spacecraft had six new gyros installed during the fifth and final space shuttle servicing mission in 2009. To date, three of those gyros remain operational, including the gyro currently experiencing problems, which the team will continue to monitor. Hubble uses three gyros to maximize efficiency but can continue to make science observations with only one gyro. NASA first developed this plan more than 20 years ago, as the best operational mode to prolong Hubble’s life and allow it to successfully provide consistent science with fewer than three working gyros. Hubble previously operated in two-gyro mode, which is negligibly different from one-gyro mode, from 2005-2009. One-gyro operations were demonstrated in 2008 for a short time with no impact to science observation quality.
Related Posts
Hubble Examines a Barred Spiral’s Light
- admin
- October 21, 2024
- 1 min read
- 0
The data in this image used a narrow-band filter that allowed H-alpha emission through to […]
SpaceX congratulates Boeing, ULA on 1st crewed Starliner launch
- admin
- June 24, 2024
- 3 min read
- 0
SpaceX bigwigs celebrated the arrival of a new American capsule on the human-spaceflight scene today […]
How Mars’ Moon Phobos Captures Our Imaginations
- admin
- May 14, 2024
- 3 min read
- 0
For a small, lumpy chunk of rock that barely reflects any light, Mars’ Moon Phobos […]
Save $400 on Unistellar smart binoculars: Early bird deal
- admin
- June 9, 2024
- 3 min read
- 0
Unistellar’s new smart binoculars, called Envision, are currently $400 off on an early bird sale. […]