Sunday, February 16, 2014

Fwd: 17 Years Since the Shuttle's Second Hubble Servicing Mission



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From: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Date: February 16, 2014 9:12:56 PM CST
To: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Subject: FW: 17 Years Since the Shuttle's Second Hubble Servicing Mission

 

 

AmericaSpace

AmericaSpace

For a nation that explores
February 15th, 2014

'A Lot of Unknowns': 17 Years Since the Shuttle's Second Hubble Servicing Mission (Part 1)

By Ben Evans

 

Barely illuminated by sunlight, Joe Tanner is pictured during EVA-4 on STS-82. Photo Credit: NASA

Barely illuminated by sunlight, Joe Tanner is pictured during EVA-4 on STS-82. Photo Credit: NASA

Seventeen years ago this week, NASA launched its second shuttle Servicing Mission (SM-2) to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The $1.5 billion observatory has earned itself a well-deserved reputation as one of the most successful space-based instruments ever launched. Across more than two decades of operations, it has peered deeper into the cosmos than ever before, acquiring images of distant galaxies, making breakthroughs in cosmology and physics by accurately determining the rate of expansion of the Universe, detecting planets around far-off stars, witnessing the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 into Jupiter, tracking cloud movements in the atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune, and creating the best currently achievable "map" of the surface of Pluto. It is nothing less than a national and international icon, although its early years were marred by a spherical aberration which the STS-61 SM-1 crew triumphantly resolved in December 1993. Three years later, seven more astronaut set off on STS-82 to turn Hubble from a repaired observatory into essentially a brand-new observatory for the 21st century.

"I would think the only other instrument that would rival it in historical value would be Galileo's original telescope," said astronaut Steve Hawley, who flew aboard both the initial Hubble deployment mission and aboard STS-82, "when he was able to look at Jupiter and detect the moons and fundamentally change the way we thought about the Universe at that time. I think it's not unfair to make that sort of comparison. Hubble is revolutionizing how we think about the Universe we live in. I would say it's almost unrivaled in history."

At the time of STS-61, the second HST servicing mission was tentatively expected to occur on STS-88 in August 1997, featuring a seven-member crew to support four EVAs on a nine-day flight. Launch of the $260 million mission was subsequently moved earlier on the manifest, finally settling on STS-82 in February 1997, which marked the return to flight of Shuttle Discovery, following a lengthy period of modification and refurbishment in Palmdale, Calif. After arriving on the West Coast of the United States at the end of September 1995, Discovery underwent numerous upgrades, including the installation of the Orbiter Docking System (ODS) for missions to Mir and the International Space Station (ISS). Consequently, she became the first orbiter to have the original airlock removed from her middeck, and a new combined ODS/airlock module was installed in her payload bay. In addition, she received improved payload bay floodlights, new shutters for her star trackers and general inspections, repairs of areas of structural corrosion, and attention to her thermal-protection system. She returned to KSC in June 1996 to begin processing for STS-82.

Veteran spacewalker Mark Lee served as the payload commander for STS-82. Photo Credit: NASA

Veteran spacewalker Mark Lee served as the payload commander for STS-82. Photo Credit: NASA

Like the first HST servicing mission, the four spacewalkers for STS-82 were announced some months before the assignment of the commander, pilot, and flight engineer. In May 1995, astronaut Mark Lee, a veteran spacewalker and then-chief of the EVA branch of the astronaut office, was named as the payload commander, with responsibility to oversee the development and planning of four scheduled EVAs. His experience was immense. "Mark had worked Hubble tasks," recalled Steve Hawley, "back before we deployed Hubble in the first place."

Under Lee's direction, the four planned EVAs on STS-82 would install two key pieces of scientific hardware to further enhance HST's capabilities, both built by Ball Aerospace on behalf of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) was designed to replace the earlier Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph (GHRS), which would be removed from Hubble and returned to Earth. (The removal of the GHRS proved timely and fortuitous, for it shut itself down a few days before STS-82 launched, due to an internal electrical problem. A planned observation of Mars was cancelled, but managers decided it was not worth the effort to bring it back to life for just a handful of days.) With a spectral range which spanned the ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared wavelengths, the $120 million STIS could perform two-dimensional (rather than one-dimensional) spectroscopic "mapping" across planets, stellar nebulae, and entire galaxies and carried the potential to collect 30 times more spectral data and 500 times more spatial data than had previously been possible with HST. This high level of sensitivity was expected to resolve fine details in star formation within distant galaxies, identify supermassive black holes, and investigate the distribution of matter in the Universe by studying quasar absorption lines.

Also to be installed on STS-82 was the Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS), which contained three separate cameras and acted as a spectrometer, a coronagraph, and a polarimeter. Like STIS, it featured internal corrective optics to compensate for the effects of the telescope's spherical aberration. In orbit, the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS) instrument would be removed from HST and the $100 million NICMOS installed in its place. The new instrument was designed to offer astronomers their first clear view of the Universe at near-infrared wavelengths using HST, thereby permitting studies of celestial objects previously too distant to be directly observed. Of particular interest to NICMOS investigators were brown dwarfs, which emit much of their light in the infrared. In order to attain the low operating temperatures of -355 degree Fahrenheit (-215 degrees Celsius) needed for its observations, the instrument featured a dewar of solid nitrogen and carbon dioxide, which would provide cooling for up to five years.

Although the perception of the public and some sectors of the media regarded SM-2 as "routine," when compared to STS-61, it was actually one of the most complex shuttle flights ever attempted. The crew would later stress that although the first Hubble servicing mission had removed several "unknowns," there remained a tremendous amount of stress on their shoulders. "A number of the Orbital Replacement Units were made for [EVA] changeout when they were first designed," said Mark Lee, "and they are fairly straightforward. Several of the others, though, require use of both hands and they get a little bit more difficult, because you don't know exactly what to expect. There are a lot of unknowns." In addition to the announcement of Lee as payload commander in May 1995, three other veteran astronauts were also assigned to join him in supporting the four spacewalks. Joining Lee on EVA-1 and EVA-3 was Steve Smith, whilst Greg Harbaugh and Joe Tanner would perform EVA-2 and EVA-4. Like Lee, Harbaugh was a spacewalking veteran, having performed an EVA on STS-54, whereas Smith and Tanner were both first-time spacewalkers.

Borrowing the image of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) from an actual photograph acquired by the STS-61 SM-1 crew, the patch for the SM-2 mission included the surnames of its seven astronauts: Ken Bowersox, Scott 'Doc' Horowitz, Joe Tanner, Steve Hawley, Mark Lee, Greg Harbaugh and Steve Smith. Image Credit: NASA

Borrowing the image of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) from an actual photograph acquired by the STS-61 SM-1 crew, the patch for the SM-2 mission included the surnames of its seven astronauts: Ken Bowersox, Scott "Doc" Horowitz, Joe Tanner, Steve Hawley, Mark Lee, Greg Harbaugh, and Steve Smith. Image Credit: NASA

With four scheduled EVAs over four consecutive flight days, early planning foresaw the priority installation of the STIS and NICMOS instruments (each the size of a telephone booth) by Lee and Smith during EVA-1. Next day, Harbaugh and Tanner would venture outside to firstly install a pie-shaped Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) to replace one of three existing devices, which was showing signs of mechanical wear. Positioned at 90-degree intervals around HST's circumference, these sensors provided accurate pointing (to within 0.01 arc-seconds) toward desired astronomical targets, then held those targets in the field of view for observation. Additionally, the FGS were used for helping to determine the precise positions and motions of stars and other celestial objects, a field known as "astrometry." Following the FGS replacement, Harbaugh and Tanner would install a new Engineering/Science Tape Recorder (ESTR), replacing one of three units which stored data aboard the telescope whilst out of scheduled communication with the ground. Finally on EVA-2, they would fit an Optics Control Electronics Enhancement Kit (OCEK), which took the form of a cable to re-route signals to send commands through the Optical Control Electronics box to move the new adjustable mirror inside the FGS.

Lee and Smith would then venture outside for EVA-3 to replace another piece of HST's pointing system, known as a Reaction Wheel Assembly (RWA), together with one of four Data Interface Units (DIUs), which provided command and data interfaces between the data-management system and the telescope's subsystems. They would also remove a second ESTR and install a device known as a Solid State Recorder (SSR). Whereas HST previously stored its data on tape, the SSR had no reels or moving parts, which reduced the likelihood of wear, and its capacity was also 10 times larger. It was intended that, after STS-82, the capacity and flexibility of the SSR would be utilised exclusively for scientific data, thus better accommodating the higher data rates of STIS and NICMOS. Finally, on EVA-4, Harbaugh and Tanner would replace one of two Solar Array Drive Electronics (SADE); built by ESA, it served to position HST's twin solar arrays. One SADE had been removed and replaced by the STS-61 crew. The removed unit was returned to Earth, refurbished to correct problems which had caused transistor failures, and launched aboard STS-82 to replace the second SADE. Finally, the spacewalkers would install Magnetic Sensing System (MSS) protective covers over key hardware to replace material which had degraded in the harsh atomic oxygen environment of low-Earth orbit. In the aftermath of the mission, a standard Servicing Mission Orbital Verification (SMOV) of the enhancements and new hardware—lasting 8-10 weeks—was scheduled to take place, before HST returned to full science operations.

"Although the various servicing tasks are prioritized," NASA explained, "they have been designed to take into account the possibility that crew members may encounter unforeseen difficulties either in tasks or equipment that could change the pre-planned schedule of installation of various equipment components." It therefore made sense for Lee, Smith, Harbaugh, and Tanner to cross-train on all of their assigned tasks, and it also required no fewer than three space suit upper torsos and four lower torsos to be housed aboard Discovery for the mission. As the chief spacewalker ("EV1″), Lee would wear red stripes around the legs of his suit for identification, whilst Smith (EV2) was clad in a pure-white suit. The other two spacewalkers would carry slightly different patterns of red stripes: Harbaugh (EV3) carried a broken red stripe on the legs of his suit, whilst Tanner (EV4) had red-and-white diagonal hash lines on his suit. Smith and Tanner shared the upper torso of the third suit, but each had his own lower portion, complete with identification markings.

The STS-82 crew included four crew members who had either flown with HST previously or trained extensively on EVA tasks associated with the telescope. Seated (left to right) are Ken Bowersox, Steve Hawley and Scott Horowitz, with Joe Tanner, Greg Harbaugh, Mark Lee and Steve Smith standing. Hawley had deployed HST, Bowersox had flown the SM-1, Harbaugh had served as a backup crewman for SM-1 and Lee had worked on EVA development in his role as chief of the astronaut office's EVA Branch. Photo Credit: NASA

The STS-82 crew included four crew members who had either flown with HST previously or trained extensively on EVA tasks associated with the telescope. Seated (left to right) are Ken Bowersox, Steve Hawley, and Scott Horowitz, with Joe Tanner, Greg Harbaugh, Mark Lee, and Steve Smith standing. Hawley had deployed HST, Bowersox had flown the SM-1, Harbaugh had served as a backup crewman for SM-1, and Lee had worked on EVA development in his role as chief of the astronaut office's EVA Branch. Photo Credit: NASA

It came as something of a surprise to the spacewalkers from the first HST servicing mission that none of them would be carried over from SM-1 onto SM-2. "Working on STS-82 seemed like an obvious thing to do, to transfer knowledge to the next Hubble crew," recalled SM-1 veteran Jeff Hoffman in a NASA oral history. However, when his crew returned to Earth in December 1993, the EVA team was told, in no uncertain terms, that other astronauts would be given a chance on future HST missions. Nonetheless, Hoffman participated in several training exercises in the water tank with the STS-82 spacewalkers and later worked as the Capcom in Mission Control during their EVAs. "I think I was able to pass on a lot of information," he said. "I was basically the backup crew. In case one of them got sick, then I would have gone. Backup crews almost never fly, so that didn't happen, but it certainly made sense."

Joining Hoffman at the Capcom's console during STS-82 were Canadian astronauts Marc Garneau and Chris Hadfield. Since the 50-foot (15-meter) Canadian-built Remote Manipulator System (RMS) mechanical arm was a critical element of each of the Hubble servicing missions, Hoffman found "interesting" notes from Garneau and Hadfield whenever he arrived on console at each Capcom shift changeover. "In each case, their notes were not all about the things that had been done by the EVA crew," Hoffman recalled, "but all the great things that the Canada arm had accomplished on the previous shift!" In fact, the importance of the RMS demanded that an experienced astronaut-operator was assigned to take control of it for the retrieval of HST, together with supporting the spacewalkers and deploying the telescope back into orbit.

By the beginning of 1996, with a little more than a year remaining before launch, the time came to assign the remainder of the STS-82 crew. Ken Bowersox, who had served as pilot of SM-1, was named as the mission commander, with fellow astronaut Scott "Doc" Horowitz as pilot. The Mission Specialist Two seat would be taken by Steve Hawley, who would serve as the RMS operator and the flight engineer for ascent and re-entry. He had been responsible for the deployment of Hubble on STS-31 in April 1990.

After STS-31, Hawley had left the astronaut corps to accept a position with NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., but returned to the Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas, in August 1992 as deputy director of Flight Crew Operations. His immediate boss was former astronaut Dave Leestma. Early in 1996, Leestma asked Hawley if he wanted to fly again on SM-2. "When I left to go to Ames, I expected that I would never fly again," Hawley admitted later, "and when I got back from Ames, I expected I would never fly again, except knowing that … there could be some chance that there'd be that opportunity if the right situation came along. But I remember thinking that it's not the sort of thing that it's appropriate for me in this job to lobby for." Leestma explained that the high-profile SM-2 flight required an experienced RMS operator, with advanced knowledge of HST. Hawley went home to talk to his wife and, with her blessing, returned to Leestma to accept the assignment. By early March, Bowersox, Horowitz, and Hawley joined Lee, Smith, Harbaugh, and Tanner to begin full-time training for the mission.

Pictured on Discovery's aft flight deck at the RMS controls, Steve Hawley was making his fourth shuttle flight. He was the only member of the original HST deployment crew to fly on a subsequent servicing mission. Photo Credit: NASA

Pictured on Discovery's aft flight deck at the RMS controls, Steve Hawley was making his fourth shuttle flight. He was the only member of the original HST deployment crew to fly on a subsequent servicing mission. Photo Credit: NASA

"For a robot arm operator, there's probably no greater task—no more rewarding task—than to do what we call a 'track-and-capture'," Hawley told the NASA oral historian. "When I deployed Hubble [on STS-31] … I picked it up out of the payload bay and let it go. It's a little different to go capture a free-floating object and to berth it and to move EVA guys around on the end of the arm. That's about as challenging as it gets in the robot arm world. Having been through dealing with Hubble once before, and knowing the dynamics of the big telescope on the end of the arm, knowing what to expect once you capture it, all that was helpful, so maybe I didn't feel as intimidated as I might have had that been my first experience with a large payload like that."

Training required the crew to spend a great deal of time in the water tanks of the 40-feet-deep (12-meter) Neutral Buoyancy Simulator (NBS) at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and the 25-feet-deep (7.6-meter) Weightless Environment Training Facility (WET-F) at JSC. The construction of a large Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) had begun in April 1995 at JSC, primarily to support EVA preparations for ISS assembly tasks, and, according to Hawley, STS-82 was the final shuttle mission to use Marshall's NBS. The NBL was formally transferred to NASA ownership upon its completion in December 1996, just a few weeks before the launch of STS-82. Measuring 200 feet (62 meters) long, 100 feet (31 meters) wide, and 40 feet (12 meters) deep, and filled with 5.1 million gallons (23.5 million liters) of water, it represented the first NASA facility to be specifically engineered for the neutral buoyancy training of spacewalkers. "I didn't get much time in the NBL," Hawley said, "because we only had about a month before we launched."

The training in the NBS tank, however, was highly realistic because the astronauts could operate in an "integrated" manner with both the spacewalkers and the RMS. "You actually had the real space-suited crewmember on a real arm," Hawley recalled. "It's underwater, but you can actually maneuver him around. The experience was extremely valuable to learn the task that he had to do and the task that I had to do and learn how to communicate back and forth. In fact, we got to where you could run each EVA day pretty much end-to-end, as it would really work, with quite high fidelity." It contrasted sharply with Hawley's earlier STS-31 training, when the simulators depicted only computerized images of the telescope and the RMS and even HST itself was modeled with a large balloon, whose dynamic motions tended to lack realism.

To enable the multitude of servicing tasks, the STS-82 crew carried numerous tools and aids with them into orbit, which included handrails and handholds, transfer equipment, protective covers, tethers, grapple and stowage fixtures, and foot restraints. A 17-inch (43-cm) titanium-aluminum Power Ratchet Tool, powered by a 28-volt battery, was designed for tasks requiring controlled torque, speed, or turns and could be used in cases where right-angle access to HST components was required. The Multisetting Torque Limiter was used in conjunction with the power tools and hand tools which interfaced with bolts or latches and was designed to prevent damage caused by the application of torque, whilst NASA's new Pistol Grip Tool fulfilled a key recommendation from the SM-1 crew, who highlighted the need for a smaller, more efficient piece of equipment for very precise tasks. Computer-controlled, battery-powered, and hand-held, the tool could be programmed to control limits for torque, speed, and number of turns.

All told, and when including spares of the tools and various connectors, adjustable extensions, and sockets, the STS-82 crew rose into orbit in February 1997 with more than 300 discrete pieces of equipment to service HST. Their efforts would transform the telescope from a 1970s-era spacecraft, with 1980s optics, into a vehicle for the 21st century with instrumentation which promised to revolutionize astronomy.

 

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AmericaSpace

AmericaSpace

For a nation that explores
February 16th, 2014

'Ready for a Margarita': 17 Years Since the Shuttle's Second Hubble Servicing Mission (Part 2)

By Ben Evans

 

At the very 'top' of the Hubble Space Telescope, astronauts Greg Harbaugh (left) and Joe Tanner work on the magnetometer cover task. Mark Lee compared Tanner's ascent to riding his Harley. Photo Credit: NASA

At the very "top" of the Hubble Space Telescope, astronauts Greg Harbaugh (left) and Joe Tanner work on the magnetometer cover task. Mark Lee compared Tanner's ascent to riding his Harley. Photo Credit: NASA

Seventeen years ago this week, NASA launched its second shuttle Servicing Mission (SM-2) to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The $1.5 billion observatory has earned itself a well-deserved reputation as one of the most successful space-based instruments ever launched. Across more than two decades of operations, it has peered deeper into the cosmos than ever before, acquiring images of distant galaxies, making breakthroughs in cosmology and physics by accurately determining the rate of expansion of the Universe, detecting planets around far-off stars, witnessing the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 into Jupiter, tracking cloud movements in the atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune, and creating the best currently achievable "map" of the surface of Pluto. It is nothing less than a national and international icon, although its early years were marred by a spherical aberration which the STS-61 SM-1 crew triumphantly resolved in December 1993. Three years later, as described in yesterday's history article, seven more astronaut set off on STS-82 to turn Hubble from a repaired observatory into essentially a brand-new observatory for the 21st century.

In spite of delays to several shuttle flights in 1996, the mission held firm to its target launch date of February 1997. Originally scheduled to launch on the 13th, it actually flew two days earlier, on the 11th. At first glance, this seemed surprising, in view of numerous minor issues in the weeks preceding the mission. During Discovery's rollout to the pad in mid-January, whilst on the crawlerway, the stack was halted when a large, Y-shaped crack was identified on the deck plating of the Mobile Launch Platform (MLP). Despite its alarming appearance it was determined that the MLP's integrity had not been compromised and the rollout continued.

Beautiful view of the STS-82 rollout on 17 January 1997. Cracks in the crawler surface halted the rollout whilst the stack was on the crawlerway, but were not considered hazardous and the rollout proceeded normally. Photo Credit: NASA

Beautiful view of the STS-82 rollout on 17 January 1997. Cracks in the crawler surface halted the rollout whilst the stack was on the crawlerway, but were not considered hazardous and the rollout proceeded normally. Photo Credit: NASA

Then, in the hours before liftoff, the loading of propellants into the External Tank met with delay, due to the need to assess the gaseous nitrogen purge system and monitor unusually high concentrations of trapped oxygen in the orbiter's midbody and payload bay. With the launch window due to open at 3:56 a.m. EST on 11 February, at the opening of a 61-minute "window," the precise time was adjusted slightly to 3:55:17 a.m. at T-9 minutes, based on a final computation of HST's orbit. Exactly on time, to the very second, Discovery turned night into day across the Florida coast as she speared into one of the shuttle's highest ever orbits, with an apogee of 356 miles (574 km) and a perigee of 295 miles (475 km). A few hours later, they were trailing their quarry by 3,560 miles (5,740 km), closing at a rate of about 350 miles (560 km) with each 90-minute orbit.

Following their first night's sleep, the astronauts began reducing the cabin pressure to prepare the four spacewalkers—Mark Lee, Steve Smith, Greg Harbaugh, and Joe Tanner—for operating in their space suits, as well as serving to clear nitrogen from their bloodstreams and thus avoiding a debilitating attack of the bends. Meanwhile, on Discovery's flight deck, fellow astronaut Steve Hawley powered up the 50-foot (15-meter) Remote Manipulator System (RMS) mechanical arm and conducted a survey of the servicing equipment, housed on a Flight Support Structure (FSS) in the payload bay. Elsewhere, HST's controllers remotely closed the telescope's aperture door and secured its antennas.

Early on 13 February, about two hours before the scheduled retrieval, Discovery had reached a distance of about eight miles (14.8 km) from the telescope, whose shiny surfaces made it literally glow and reflect the blues and whites of Earth. At about 1 a.m. EST, Commander Ken Bowersox and Pilot Scott "Doc" Horowitz executed the Terminal Initiation (TI) maneuver, followed by a number of mid-course correction burns, to guide the orbiter toward its quarry from "below," thereby minimising the risk of causing contamination from thruster firings. By the time he reached 2,300 feet (730 meters), at about 2:30 a.m., he assumed manual control and gradually brought the shuttle to a position just 35 feet (10 meters) away from the telescope. With the west coast of Mexico just coming into view, Hawley then extended the RMS, grappled HST at 3:34 a.m., and berthed it securely onto the FSS about 30 minutes later.

"You should have seen the expression on Dr Stevie's face," Bowersox told Mission Control. "It looked like he just shook hands with an old friend."

Discovery and her seven-man crew roar into the night on 11 February 1997. Photo Credit: NASA

Discovery and her seven-man crew roar into the night on 11 February 1997. Photo Credit: NASA

"We watched it from down here, Sox," replied Capcom Marc Garneau. "It was certainly an absolute thrill for us to see it on television and congratulations to all of you for an outstanding rendezvous and a great capture. We're looking forward to getting out there and starting work on that telescope."

Immediately after berthing on the FSS, a remote-controlled umbilical was mated to HST to provide temporary electrical power. With EVA-1 by Mark Lee and Steve Smith scheduled to begin late on 13 February, HST Program Scientist Ed Weiler was under no illusions as to its importance, for it would feature the installation of the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) and Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS). "All EVAs are important," he told journalists, "but [this] is really the Superbowl of EVAs. If that goes well, I think it will really put Hubble into a position of having world-class scientific capability well into the 21st century." Preparations proceeded briskly and it seemed likely that Lee and Smith would be outside around an hour earlier than planned. However, whilst in the external airlock, they were suddenly halted when one of the telescope's 40-foot-long (12.2-meter) solar arrays windmilled through a quarter-turn, reorienting itself within about 60 seconds from a horizontal into a vertical configuration. It then stabilised.

"That was one of the more memorable things from the flight," Steve Hawley told the NASA oral historian, with a hint of understatement. "We coincidentally were trained to recognize an uncommanded slew of the solar arrays. If, for some reason, the solar array drive motor should fail in some manner, and they'll start to drive, you're trained to recognize that. You can send a command that will disable the motor so the solar arrays don't drive into something." Hawley and Joe Tanner were on Discovery's aft flight deck when the array moved. The two men exchanged glances. Both of them knew that the arrays were not supposed to drive that rapidly, and it soon became obvious that it was an uncommanded movement. With cameras focused on the airlock hatch, few in Mission Control had any awareness of the motion, and Tanner called the ground to advise them. "I was convinced that we probably wouldn't be going EVA today," admitted Hawley. "At the time, we didn't know what had caused it and they drove [the array] all the way to the stops."

It subsequently became clear that the new external airlock, which was flying aboard Discovery for the first time on STS-82, was part of the root cause. "There was actually an interior airlock that had been removed," said Hawley, "and they had replumbed the way the air is evacuated from the airlock volume. As luck would have it, the way the air exited was through a pipe that came out under the [telescope]. We didn't know it at the time, but what people on the ground figured was that air from the venting of the airlock impinged on the solar arrays and started them moving." The air had funneled its way through thermal blankets in the payload bay, then vented directly on to the array, causing it to "windmill" from horizontal to vertical. Fortunately, no damage was caused, but Hawley felt that if Mission Control had seen the event on television, they would have cancelled EVA-1. Fortunately no damage was caused, and about 75 minutes later than intended, at 11:34 p.m. EST, Lee and Smith floated out of the airlock to begin the first spacewalk of the mission.

Steve Smith works on Hubble during EVA-3. The new external airlock, which was making its first flight on STS-82, is clearly visible in the foreground. Photo Credit: NASA

Steve Smith works on Hubble during EVA-3. The new external airlock, which was making its first flight on STS-82, is clearly visible in the foreground. Photo Credit: NASA

Venturing into open space for the first time in his astronaut career, Smith was electrified. "Oh my gosh … beautiful!" he radioed. "It was worth the wait!"

Quickly, the two men set to work, with Smith riding at the end of the RMS arm and Lee free-floating in the payload bay. They opened HST's aft shroud doors to remove the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph (GHRS) and Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS), both of which were stowed for return to Earth. Manipulating a suited crewman on the end of the mechanical arm was entirely new ground for Steve Hawley. "We had enough camera views that I could see what [Smith] was doing," he remembered, years later. "I knew what his next step was going to be, so it was easy for me to put him where he needed to be." One of the biggest issues in training had been communication between Hawley and whoever was on the RMS, particularly if communication was also ongoing with the Capcom in Mission Control.

"We developed some hand signals that we could use in the event that somebody else was talking on the radio," he said. "We didn't want to sit there and wait for that conversation to end before we could do the next task, because time is pretty critical." They also devised co-ordination systems, based on the orientations of the shuttle and the EVA crewman, to ensure that movements were crisp and correct. "We spent a lot of time practicing being very disciplined in how we communicated," added Hawley. For example, in cases where the EVA crewman wanted to move to a different position within the payload bay, he might tell Hawley to move him port, starboard, forward, or aft, relative to the orbiter. In other circumstances (for example, whilst working inside one of the telescope's bays), the EVA crewman might switch the point of reference from "orbiter co-ordinates" to "body co-ordinates," with calls to Hawley such as "head-up," "feet-down," "left," or "right." Although complex at first, months of training and practice turned it into an elegant symphony. Hawley liked its unambiguity, which eliminated errors. "My recollection," he said, "is that we never made a mistake the whole flight in terms of a bad command or going the wrong direction, because we thought it was very important and we practiced it a lot."

At about 2 a.m. EST on the 14th, about 2.5 hours into EVA-1, the STIS instrument had been successfully installed. Two hours later, NICMOS was also in place. Tolerances were incredibly tight, with no more than 0.5 inches (1.2 cm) clearance in some cases, requiring the free-floating Lee to verbally guide both Smith (who had a face-full of instrument) and Hawley (who was operating the RMS from the shuttle's cabin). In fact, the question of who actually fitted the new devices proved a subject of some humor. Since Smith was physically holding the instrument, it might seem initially that he had installed it. Not so, joked Hawley, for it was he who was actually maneuvering the RMS, with Smith and the instrument, into place. "All he can see is a face full of instrument," Hawley noted, "so my job was to maneuver him around. Steve Smith always said he inserted the instrument in the telescope, but I used to tell him, 'No, I really did. You were just holding it!'"

Greg Harbaugh works to manhandle the Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) into position on EVA-2. Photo Credit: NASA

Greg Harbaugh works to manhandle the Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) into position on EVA-2. Photo Credit: NASA

After installation, payload controllers verified that the health of the new instruments was good, and after STS-82 they underwent several weeks of calibration. In the meantime, EVA-1 concluded at 6:16 a.m. EST, after six hours and 42 minutes. The following night, it was the turn of Greg Harbaugh and Joe Tanner, who ventured into Discovery's payload bay almost an hour ahead of schedule at 10:25 p.m. EST. Working quickly, the two men replaced a degraded Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS), which would be returned to Earth for refurbishment and re-installation during the SM-3 mission, then planned for November 1999. Late in the spacewalk, they noticed cracks and wear in the Teflon outer coat of the telescope's 17-layered thermal blanketing on the side facing toward the Sun and into the direction of travel. Some of the cracks were as long as eight inches (20 cm) and were not, said Harbaugh, simply "tiny little spider cracks." Moreover, a small "crater," caused by an orbital debris impact, was spotted in one of HST's antennas.

"In several places, it's cracked," said Tanner. "It's just gotten old, it looks like." Although there was no obvious evidence of crumbling, he recommended that care should be taken when touching the insulation. It was clear that although a more comprehensive fix would be necessary on SM-3, planning began to utilise some of the servicing time on STS-82 to effect repairs. In the meantime, at the end of EVA-2, Discovery's thrusters were fired for 22 minutes to gently raise HST's altitude by about two miles (3.3 km). Executing such a maneuver required Bowersox and Horowitz to fire the thrusters in a rocking, side-to-side motion to gradually ascend along the velocity vector. Discovery's tail-mounted thrusters were fired continuously throughout the reboost, with those on either side of the nose firing sequentially at 60-second intervals. Two more reboosts were planned at the end of EVA-3 and EVA-4 to raise the telescope's orbit by a total of about 5.7 miles (9.2 km). "If we were to have a camera outside actually looking at it, you would hardly notice this," said STS-82 Lead Flight Director Jeff Bantle before launch. "Using the venier jets is going to be like normal attitude control. In fact, all of our reboost is planned while the [EVA] crew is outside doing the clean-up in the bay."

Close-up view of the torn insulation in Bay 8. Photo Credit: NASA

Close-up view of the torn insulation in Bay 8. Photo Credit: NASA

With the second spacewalk officially concluded at 5:52 a.m. EST on 15 February, after seven hours and 27 minutes, the STS-82 crew fulfilled their minimum requirements for mission success. Lee and Smith were next, departing the airlock at 9:53 p.m. that same night to firstly change the Data Interface Unit (DIU), which was never intended for orbital replacement. "The DIU is really a tough nut, because you have got a whole bunch of connectors you have to unfasten and reconnect and any one of them could be balky and create problems," said Harbaugh before launch. "It's is not a piece of cake." With Lee anchored to the RMS arm, and Smith free-floating in the payload bay, the DIU was replaced successfully. The spacewalkers then exchanged one of the telescope's engineering science tape recorders for a new solid-state recorder and concluded EVA-3 by replacing one of the Reaction Wheel Assemblies (RWA), which had failed a year earlier. Shortly after Lee and Smith returned inside Discovery at 5:04 a.m. EST on 16 February, it was decided to insert an unscheduled fifth EVA to repair HST's damaged thermal insulation. A conversation between Bowersox and Jeff Bantle prompted the lead flight director to approve the "short" EVA-5, lasting around four hours, to effect a fix.

In the meantime, Harbaugh and Tanner floated outside at 10:45 p.m. on the 16th to begin the fourth spacewalk, whose primary objectives included the replacement of one set of Solar Array Drive Electronics (SADE) for the solar arrays and the installation of covers over magnetometers. This latter task required them to ascend about 60 feet (18 meters) "above" the payload bay and attach thermal blankets over two areas of degraded insulation around HST's light shield. From inside the crew cabin, Mark Lee compared Tanner's ascent to "riding your Harley," whilst the spacewalker admired the view and remarked that it was fortunate he did not suffer from a fear of heights. During the course of the EVA, Horowitz and Lee worked on Discovery's middeck to fabricate four new insulation patches to be installed the following night. In total, 35 pages of instructions were transmitted up to the shuttle, employing spare micrometeroid insulation pieces, Kapton tape, parachute cord, and alligator clips. By the time Harbaugh and Tanner returned inside the orbiter at 5:19 a.m. EST on 17 February, after six hours and 34 minutes, the grand finale of EVA-5 had taken shape and was ready to go.

Following a good night's sleep, Lee and Smith left the airlock for what they expected to be the final time at 10:15 p.m. on the 17th. They attached thermal blankets onto three key equipment compartments at the top of the Support Systems Module, at HST's midpoint, where critical data-processing, electronics, and instrument telemetry packages were housed. Specifically, Bay 7 carried mechanisms to control the solar arrays, Bay 8 held pointing electronics and a retrieval mode gyro assembly, and Bay 10 accommodated the science instrument control and data-handling subsystems. All three required protection to prevent problems in the future.

It was often said that on EVA days, the preparations for the spacewalk completely took over the middeck, as this view of Steve Smith (left) and Mark Lee at work on 12 February 1997 illustrates. Photo Credit: NASA

It was often said that on EVA days, the preparations for the spacewalk completely took over the middeck, as this view of Steve Smith (left) and Mark Lee at work on 12 February 1997 illustrates. Photo Credit: NASA

Following this work, Lee and Smith began cleaning up their work site and returned to the airlock, when flight controllers noticed a potential problem with one of the four RWAs. Although the RWA fitted on EVA-3 was operating without problems, one of its older siblings had begun to exhibit discrepancies. "They would like to perform some testing on it that may take 15-30 minutes, just to assure themselves that nothing is wrong with it," Capcom Marc Garneau told the spacewalkers. "In the meantime, because we want to keep open the possibility of changing it out today, we'd like to hold off doing anything further." Lee and Smith entered the airlock and connected their suits' utilities to the orbiter's Servicing and Cooling Umbilical (SCU).

Had the call come from the ground to replace the RWA, it would be have been necessary to repressurize the airlock, open the internal hatch, and retrieve a spare unit from Discovery's middeck. Fortunately, engineers ran a series of tests and powered up the three "old" RWAs to assess them for problems. Engineers worked to modify software originally written to test the newly-installed RWA so that it could test the troublesome unit, which required a couple of hours. At length, when the software commanded the RWA to put high torque on the wheel, "the thing just took off," in Weiler's words, "and we knew it was just fine." A record-breaking sixth EVA on a single mission evaded the STS-82 crew. Lee and Smith concluded EVA-5 after five hours and 17 minutes, bringing the SM-2 spacewalking total to 33 hours and 11 minutes. A final burn of the maneuvering thrusters increased their orbit to a final deployment altitude of 368 miles (593 km) x 383 miles (617 km). "We did 82 minutes of reboost," Steve Hawley recalled years later, "and got Hubble, I guess, as high as it had been." Ed Weiler was ecstatic, describing the observatory as no longer the "original" Hubble Space Telescope … but as a brand-new instrument: "You can call it Hubble-2."

After a job exceptionally well done, HST's solar arrays were oriented toward the Sun to provide electrical power and recharge its batteries. As Steve Hawley grappled the telescope with the RMS, payload controllers commanded its aperture door to open and HST and Discovery parted company at 1:41 a.m. EST on 19 February. Shortly afterward, the telescope resumed standard operations and began processing commands to the ground through the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS) system. Two days later, it was time for the final curtain to fall on STS-82. Originally, Discovery was scheduled to land at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida at 1:50 a.m. EST on 21 February, but Entry Flight Director Wayne Hale called off the first attempt, due to the presence of off-shore showers and low cloud cover over the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) runway.

Ready to resume its mission of exploration, a rejuvenated Hubble drifts away into the inky blackness after deployment. Photo Credit: NASA

Ready to resume its mission of exploration, a rejuvenated Hubble drifts away into the inky blackness after deployment. Photo Credit: NASA

The next opportunity to land was at 3:32 a.m., requiring the irreversible deorbit burn to occur at 2:21 a.m. At length, Bowersox was given the "Go" to begin the 3.5-minute burn, committing Discovery to a 71-minute-long descent. Re-entering the upper atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean, the shuttle swept across the entire continental United States and appeared as a bright streak as it passed over Texas.

"I think we just flew over Houston," Bowersox radioed at one stage.

"You certainly did," replied Capcom Kevin Kregel, "and you lit up the entire sky with the orbiter and its trail. It was pretty impressive."

"It was a pretty good view from here, too," said Bowersox. "We almost saw the Astrodome."

Touching down on Runway 33 at 3:32 am, the STS-82 landing was aided for the first time by the presence of 52 halogen lights, positioned at 200 feet (60 meter) intervals along the centreline. Although overshadowed by the success of its predecessor, SM-1, the second HST servicing mission had proven equally as challeging for the crew and the thousands of ground personnel who put it together. Yet the work undertaken by Discovery's crew had turned the telescope from a 1970s spacecraft with 1980s optical technology into an observatory for the 21st century, with more modern instruments. "Three hundred years from now," explained project scientist David Leckrone, "none of us in all likelihood will be remembered as individuals, but certainly the Hubble Space Telescope will be remembered … as a high point in human civilization. That's an awe-inspiring thought and something that motivates us to do our very best for Hubble and for science."

The astronauts themselves were also pleased and relieved that their mission was complete. After almost two years of training, Mark Lee declared that he was ready to buy his crewmates a drink. "Up here," he said whilst in orbit, "we've got some orange mango and some lemonade, but that's as stiff as it gets. So I'm ready for a margarita!"

 

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