News Release

IEEE-USA Supports Prolonging Life of Hubble
Space Telescope
in Statement to House Science Committee
WASHINGTON (02 February 2005)
— NASA
should explore all possible avenues toward
prolonging the useful life of the Hubble Space
Telescope, IEEE-USA said today in a statement to
the House Science Committee.
The most urgent need is a servicing mission to
refurbish and upgrade the Hubble so that it can
continue gathering high-resolution images of
astronomical objects. News reports, however,
indicate that The White House might eliminate
mission funding from its 2006 budget request.
“The Hubble telescope has resulted in some of
the most important scientific discoveries in the
last decade,” said Dr. Russell Lefevre, IEEE-USA
vice president, technology policy. “Our
understanding of the universe has grown
immensely, and it would be a tragedy for the
world’s scientific community if the servicing
mission was cancelled.”
Launched on 25 April 1990 by the crew of the
Space Shuttle Discovery, the Hubble is a
cooperative program of NASA and the European
Space Agency to operate a space-based
observatory for the benefit of science and
humanity. Just last year, it detected more than
100 planets around distant stars, captured
images of distant galaxies and recorded the
first images of the edge of the known universe.
Space-shuttle astronauts have serviced the
Hubble four times, the last servicing in 2002.
A service mission would keep the Hubble
operational until the James Webb Space Telescope
is launched in 2011, at the earliest. Without
such a mission, the 2.4-meter reflecting
telescope could stop sending its
photos
as early as 2007.
“Prospects for continued operation of Hubble
until that date without a servicing mission are
small,” the IEEE-USA statement said. “The
absence of the Hubble’s extraordinary abilities
would adversely impact astronomical research.”
IEEE-USA’s November 2004 position supporting
servicing of the Hubble is available at
www.ieeeusa.org/policy/positions/hubble.asp.
You can view today’s statement to the House
Science Committee at
www.ieeeusa.org/policy/policy/2005/020205.asp.
IEEE-USA is an organizational unit of the IEEE.
It was created in 1973 to advance the public
good and promote the careers and public policy
interests of the more than 220,000 technology
professionals who are U.S. members of the IEEE.
The IEEE is the world's largest technical
professional society. For more information, go
to
www.ieeeusa.org
###
Contact: Chris McManes
Senior Public Relations Coordinator
Phone: + 1 202 785 0017, ext. 8356
E-Mail:
c.mcmanes@ieee.org
IEEE-USA
1828 L Street, N.W., Suite 1202
Washington, DC 20036-5104
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Last Update:
15 May 2007
Staff Contact: Pender M. McCarter,
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