The Worm is Back
GSFC20200518RR100
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Nzinga Tull, Hubble systems anomaly response manager at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, works in the control room on July 15, 2021, to restore Hubble to full science operations.  ---  More info:  Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.   In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
You might see a DeLorean zipping around Greenbelt, Maryland, on Oct. 21, 2015, the day Marty McFly and Doc Brown arrive from 1985 in "Back to the Future, Part II," but don't look for flaming tread marks in its wake.  The DeLorean DMC-12, commonly seen on the roads of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is better known for the version that starred as a plutonium-powered time machine in the “Back to the Future” trilogy.  After some investigation, Goddard’s Office of Communications found the owner of the stainless steel, gull-winged, two-door coupe. Goddard software test engineer, Brendan Rebo bought the 1982 DeLorean off eBay about four and a half years ago. “The car attracts a lot more attention than I expected,” Rebo admitted. “I hear a lot of jokes about whether or not I’ve reached 88 miles per hour yet.”  As “Back to the Future” fans around the world celebrate today, Rebo also celebrates his birthday.  While the second film predicted technology, such as flying cars, that doesn’t yet exist, people can still marvel at the classic car and movie reference.  Credit: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
Happy Back to the Future Day
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
You might see a DeLorean zipping around Greenbelt, Maryland, on Oct. 21, 2015, the day Marty McFly and Doc Brown arrive from 1985 in "Back to the Future, Part II," but don't look for flaming tread marks in its wake.   The DeLorean DMC-12, commonly seen on the roads of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is better known for the version that starred as a plutonium-powered time machine in the “Back to the Future” trilogy.   After some investigation, Goddard’s Office of Communications found the owner of the stainless steel, gull-winged, two-door coupe. Goddard software test engineer, Brendan Rebo bought the 1982 DeLorean off eBay about four and a half years ago. “The car attracts a lot more attention than I expected,” Rebo admitted. “I hear a lot of jokes about whether or not I’ve reached 88 miles per hour yet.”   As “Back to the Future” fans around the world celebrate today, Rebo also celebrates his birthday.   While the second film predicted technology, such as flying cars, that doesn’t yet exist, people can still marvel at the classic car and movie reference.   Credit: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
Happy Back to the Future Day
Nzinga Tull, Hubble systems anomaly response manager at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, works in the control room on July 15, 2021, to restore Hubble to full science operations.  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  --- More info:  Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
You might see a DeLorean zipping around Greenbelt, Maryland, on Oct. 21, 2015, the day Marty McFly and Doc Brown arrive from 1985 in "Back to the Future, Part II," but don't look for flaming tread marks in its wake.  The DeLorean DMC-12, commonly seen on the roads of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is better known for the version that starred as a plutonium-powered time machine in the “Back to the Future” trilogy.  After some investigation, Goddard’s Office of Communications found the owner of the stainless steel, gull-winged, two-door coupe. Goddard software test engineer, Brendan Rebo bought the 1982 DeLorean off eBay about four and a half years ago. “The car attracts a lot more attention than I expected,” Rebo admitted. “I hear a lot of jokes about whether or not I’ve reached 88 miles per hour yet.”  As “Back to the Future” fans around the world celebrate today, Rebo also celebrates his birthday.  While the second film predicted technology, such as flying cars, that doesn’t yet exist, people can still marvel at the classic car and movie reference.  Credit: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
Happy Back to the Future Day
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth ---    More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info:  Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  --- More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
The Worm is Back
GSFC20200805RR100
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth ---    More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info:  Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
You might see a DeLorean zipping around Greenbelt, Maryland, on Oct. 21, 2015, the day Marty McFly and Doc Brown arrive from 1985 in "Back to the Future, Part II," but don't look for flaming tread marks in its wake.  The DeLorean DMC-12, commonly seen on the roads of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is better known for the version that starred as a plutonium-powered time machine in the “Back to the Future” trilogy.  After some investigation, Goddard’s Office of Communications found the owner of the stainless steel, gull-winged, two-door coupe. Goddard software test engineer, Brendan Rebo bought the 1982 DeLorean off eBay about four and a half years ago. “The car attracts a lot more attention than I expected,” Rebo admitted. “I hear a lot of jokes about whether or not I’ve reached 88 miles per hour yet.”  As “Back to the Future” fans around the world celebrate today, Rebo also celebrates his birthday.  While the second film predicted technology, such as flying cars, that doesn’t yet exist, people can still marvel at the classic car and movie reference.  Credit: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
Happy Back to the Future Day
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
On June 16, 2020, a test was conducted at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center on a new pointing mode for the observatory. Uploaded to the spacecraft only days before, the mode allows for a problematic gyroscope (a sensor used to determine which direction and how fast Hubble is turning) to be bypassed when trying to keep the spacecraft steady. Systems manager Morgan Van Arsdall monitors the process while many of her teammates monitor the spacecraft’s subsystems from home. Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
GSFC20200616RR102
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  --- More info:  Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth ---    More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Members of the Hubble operations team work in the control room on July 15, 2021 to restore Hubble to science operations.  Credits: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth  ---  More info: Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the observatory’s onboard science instruments, halted suddenly on June 13. When the main computer failed to receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically placed Hubble’s science instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer be doing science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.  In response to the anomaly, NASA began a switch to backup spacecraft hardware on Hubble in response to an ongoing problem with its payload computer. This was a multi-day event.  Science observations restarted the afternoon of Saturday, July 17.
NASA Begins Switch to Backup Spacecraft Hardware
Space shuttle Discovery, mounted atop a NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) flies near the U.S. Capitol, Tuesday, April 17, 2012, in Washington. Discovery, the first orbiter retired from NASA’s shuttle fleet, completed 39 missions, spent 365 days in space, orbited the Earth 5,830 times, and traveled 148,221,675 miles. NASA will transfer Discovery to the National Air and Space Museum to begin its new mission to commemorate past achievements in space and to educate and inspire future generations of explorers. Photo Credit: (NASA/Rebecca Roth)
Space Shuttle Discovery DC Fly-Over
Craig DeForest, second from left, speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington as Madhulika Guhathakurta, left, David Webb and Alysha Reinard look on. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing
Madhulika Guhathakurta, seated left, STEREO program scientist, speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing
Alysha Reinard, as research scientist with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of Colorado Boulder, speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing
Madhulika Guhathakurta, seated left, STEREO program scientist, speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington as Craig DeForest, David Webb and Alysha Reinard, look on. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth).
STEREO Press Briefing
Craig DeForest, a staff scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing
David Webb, a research physicist from the Institute for Scientific Research at Boston College speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The briefing was held to discuss new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing
Space shuttle Discovery, mounted atop a NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) flies near the U.S. Capitol, Tuesday, April 17, 2012, in Washington. Discovery, the first orbiter retired from NASA’s shuttle fleet, completed 39 missions, spent 365 days in space, orbited the Earth 5,830 times, and traveled 148,221,675 miles. NASA will transfer Discovery to the National Air and Space Museum to begin its new mission to commemorate past achievements in space and to educate and inspire future generations of explorers. Photo Credit: (NASA/Rebecca Roth)
Space Shuttle Discovery DC Fly-Over
Madhulika Guhathakurta, seated left, STEREO program scientist, speaks during a press briefing, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011, at NASA Headquarters in Washington as Craig DeForest, David Webb and Alysha Reinard, look on. The briefing was held to discusses new details about the structure of solar storms and the impact they have on Earth. The new information comes from NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft and other NASA probes. Photo Credit: (NASA/GSFC/Rebecca Roth)
STEREO Press Briefing