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"Moving Beyond Earth," a new exhibit at the National Air and Space Museum, features two new items from the Hubble Space Telescope. The new gallery leaves plenty of room to add new artifacts in the coming years as NASA retires the space shuttle program. After the current mission, only five missions remain.


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Big Hubble tools now artifacts at Smithsonian

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two instruments that helped save the Hubble Space Telescope from failure in 1993 were recently returned to Earth and are on display at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum.

The first phase of a new human spaceflight gallery opened last week. The new “Moving Beyond Earth” gallery leaves plenty of room to add artifacts as NASA ends the space shuttle program.

The two large instruments on display from Hubble, each weighing more than 600 pounds, provided critical repairs to flaws in the telescope’s eye that could have doomed the project.

“They’re a lot lighter in space than they are down here. You can handle them with one hand,” said astronaut John Grunsfeld, who flew on three repair missions and made eight spacewalks. “That’s the magic of being in free-fall.”

The Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement, or COSTAR for short, was part of an emergency Hubble repair in 1993 after scientists discovered that the primary mirror was flawed, making images blurry.

It was retrieved during a Hubble makeover in May and will be on long-term display. The world’s most visited museum is remaking its human spaceflight gallery with interactive displays on the shuttle, space stations and future missions to the moon and beyond.

NASA’s persistence in fixing Hubble allowed the telescope to make history, said Dr. Edward Weiler, Hubble’s longtime chief scientist and now an associate NASA administrator.

“For the first time in human history, it showed that super massive black holes a billion times larger than the mass of our sun weren’t just ‘Star Trek’ fantasy but were scientific reality,” he said. “You only get to do that once.”

Combined with advancements from the second piece on display, the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2, the repairs “turned the Hubble into a great American comeback story,” Weiler said.

A more advanced James Webb Space Telescope that could shed more light on how the universe was formed is set to be launched in 2014 on a European rocket.

“If humans would like to know how it all began, how the universe started to get itself together,” Weiler said, “we’re going to have to do something far beyond Hubble.”

Scientists and curators said Hubble has touched many parts of society. Weiler said it provided images of the universe for possibly every science and astronomy textbook around the world.


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