
Meeting at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., senior Hubble program managers and engineers are analyzing a plan to switch to a back-up instrument control and data formatting unit that never has been turned on during the observatory's 18 years in orbit.
The telescope's prime unit failed late last month, forcing ground controllers to shut down astronomical observations of planets, stars and galaxies across the universe.
The failure also forced NASA to delay until at least February the planned Oct. 14 launch of Atlantis and seven astronauts on a fifth and final Hubble servicing mission. The failed unit is considered so important that NASA officials decided to delay the mission until a spare unit can be readied for flight.

Engineers are taking a cautious approach to the operation. The complexity of it is unrivaled because ground controllers also have to rev up the backups for five other key electrical components in order to operate the backup instrument control and data formatting unit.
NASA officials nonetheless have high confidence that the 40-hour operation -- which tentatively is set to begin next Wednesday -- will be successfully completed. In that case, stalled science operations would get back under way as early as Friday.

A final go-ahead is expected at the conclusion of a briefing with top NASA science administrators at NASA Headquarters at 10:30 a.m. next Tuesday. A media teleconference is scheduled for at 1 p.m. next Tuesday.
Hubble is equipped with prime and backup Control Unit/Science Data Formatters, electronics boxes that compose and send all commands and data to destinations such as the telescope's flight computer and its data management unit.
A primer on Hubble systems is here: HSTSYSTEMS. See Section 5.5 for details on the Control Unit/Science Data Formatter.
NOTE ON IMAGES: Click to enlarge and save the Hubble Space Telescope images captured during a 1999 servicing mission flown aboard Discovery. You can also click the enlarged images to get even bigger views. Photo credits: NASA/STS-103 Crew. The line art comes the Hubble Systems primer.
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