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NASA Approves Robotic Hubble Repair Mission

Posted on: Tuesday, 10 August 2004, 06:00 CDT

(AP) -- NASA's chief is urging his Hubble Space Telescope team to press ahead with plans for a robotic repair mission to the aging observatory, saying, "Let's go save the Hubble."

Administrator Sean O'Keefe says he will ask Congress for money to accomplish the job. He estimates it will take about $1 billion to $1.6 billion to develop and launch a robot to make the needed upgrades to keep the popular telescope running and to get it out of orbit once its work is through.

In a meeting with more than 200 Hubble engineers and scientists at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., O'Keefe told them he was encouraged by their progress on coming up with a robotic solution, "actually astonished."

The Baltimore Sun quoted a Goddard scientist as saying that the group in attendance was delighted by the news and cheered several times.

In an interview with the Orlando Sentinel on Monday, O'Keefe said, "Everybody says, 'We want to save the Hubble' - well, let's go save the Hubble."

NASA will ask for more money through a budget amendment, said Susan Hendrix, a spokeswoman at Goddard.

Hendrix stressed that it will be another six months to a year before a final decision is made. "By next summer, they'll know the technology. We just need to go a little bit further to see, because this has never been done before," she said Tuesday.

In January, O'Keefe announced that no more astronauts and space shuttles would be sent to Hubble, in need of new parts if it's to keep working beyond 2007 or 2008. He based his decision on safety concerns that arose out of the Columbia disaster.

But a groundswell of support for the telescope that has shown the world some of the most dramatic photos from space forced efforts to find a way to keep the observatory working, so robotics entered the picture.

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Copyright © 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

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