Tuesday, February 13

Goddard Engineers Provide Training for Hubble Astronauts

Feb. 13, 2007

Dwayne Brown/Grey Hautaluoma
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726/0668

Susan Hendrix/Ed Campion
Johnson Space Center, Houston
301-286-7745/0697

RELEASE: 07-40

GODDARD ENGINEERS PROVIDE TRAINING FOR HUBBLE ASTRONAUTS

GREENBELT, Md. - Astronauts selected for the next space shuttle
servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope are at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., this week for their first formal
crew orientation.

Goddard engineers and managers are briefing the crew about Hubble
operations, facilities and hardware and discussing the mission's five
scheduled spacewalks. Astronauts will install two new science
instruments and perform upgrades to the observatory.

"While Johnson Space Center provides underwater training for the
astronauts in its Neutral Buoyancy Lab, Goddard offers them hands-on
experience using high fidelity mock-ups of Hubble and the specialty
tools required for the tasks that lie ahead," said Preston Burch,
associate director and program manager for Hubble at Goddard.
"Together, we help ensure a flawless servicing mission."

During their visit, astronauts will split their time between classroom
activities and exercises inside Goddard's Class 10,000 cleanroom,
which houses exact replicas of Hubble's electrical and equipment bays
and actual flight hardware. This will be the first space flight for
three of the seven astronauts, and this introduction will be their
first look at the tools and techniques they will be mastering.

Veteran astronaut Scott Altman will command the final shuttle mission
to Hubble. Navy Reserve Capt. Gregory C. Johnson will serve as pilot.
The mission specialists are veteran spacewalkers John Grunsfeld and
Mike Massimino and first-time space fliers Andrew Feustel, Air Force
Col. Michael Good and flight engineer and robotic arm operator Megan
McArthur.

The two new instruments being delivered to Hubble are the Cosmic
Origins Spectrograph (COS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). The COS is
the most sensitive ultraviolet spectrograph ever flown on Hubble. The
instrument will probe the large-scale structure of the universe,
which is traced by the distribution of galaxies and intergalactic gas
observed by Hubble. It also will explore the nature and distribution
of the mysterious dark matter that sculpts that structure. Dark
matter is an invisible form of matter whose total mass in the
universe is more than five times that of "normal" matter (i.e., gas,
dust, stars, etc.) and which only can be studied by observing its
influence on the distribution of normal matter in our universe.

WFC3 is a new camera sensitive across a wide range of wavelengths,
including infrared, visible, and ultraviolet light. The camera will
undertake a broad range of studies. It will examine the planets in
our solar system, nearby galaxies with stories to tell about the
formation of their stars, and early and distant galaxies beyond
Hubble's current reach.

Other planned work on the mission includes installation of a
refurbished Fine Guidance Sensor that replaces one degrading unit of
the three already onboard. The sensors control the telescope's
pointing system. An attempt also will be made to repair the Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. Installed in 1997, the instrument
stopped working in 2004. The instrument is used for high resolution
studies in visible and ultraviolet light of both nearby star systems
and distant galaxies, providing information about the motions and
chemical makeup of stars, planetary atmospheres, and other galaxies.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation
between NASA and the European Space Agency. The Space Telescope
Science Institute, Baltimore, conducts Hubble science operations. The
Institute is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy, Inc., Washington.

For more about upcoming space shuttle missions, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/hubble


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