As much as I'll hate to see HST go, I'm trying to convince myself that ending Hubble is like ending Mercury for Gemini or Gemini for Apollo or Apollo for...well you get the idea. Regardless, I'm going to miss HST. Patrick James Helsby wrote:
Just saw this pop up on Slashdot. http://www.cbc.ca/story/science/national/2005/02/07/aids-human050207.html
to quote: /"The famous but troubled camera is heading for a "robotic de-orbit mission," the space agency said Monday in its budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.'
'That means the Hubble, which hovers about 600 kilometres above the Earth and circles it every 95 minutes, will be guided into the ocean once it has worn out. "The timing and content of the de-orbit mission will be a result of activities conducted in 2005," NASA said."/
Is this the end of our quests to the farthest reaches of space? Or just a new chapter.
IMHO, this is a sad day for one of my fondest childhood memory makers.
Cheers, James H.