1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:03,770 “After Hubble’s deployment in 1990. Astronomers quickly realized there was a problem.” 2 00:00:03,770 --> 00:00:06,639 The conclusion we've come to from that is that there is a significant 3 00:00:06,639 --> 00:00:09,943 spherical aberration appears to be present in the optics. 4 00:00:09,943 --> 00:00:13,680 ...and that we should be able to fix it in our insurance program. 5 00:00:13,680 --> 00:00:16,483 Thousands and thousands of people worked on Hubble. 6 00:00:16,483 --> 00:00:19,853 And by the way, if you asked all of those thousands and thousands of people 7 00:00:19,853 --> 00:00:23,023 before the launch in April of 1990. 8 00:00:23,023 --> 00:00:25,959 “What’s your ten biggest concerns about what could go wrong on Hubble?” 9 00:00:25,959 --> 00:00:29,496 I absolutely guarantee you that not one of them would have said 10 00:00:29,496 --> 00:00:31,297 spherical aberration or a bad mirror. 11 00:00:31,297 --> 00:00:32,766 And we have liftoff. 12 00:00:32,766 --> 00:00:36,302 Liftoff of the Space Shuttle Endeavour on an ambitious mission to service 13 00:00:36,302 --> 00:00:45,512 the Hubble Space Telescope. 14 00:00:45,512 --> 00:00:47,447 Spherical aberration is a problem 15 00:00:47,447 --> 00:00:50,350 in the surface structure of the mirror. 16 00:00:50,350 --> 00:00:54,320 The mirror is supposed to be ground to a perfect parabola. 17 00:00:54,320 --> 00:00:55,688 Where all parallel 18 00:00:55,688 --> 00:00:58,925 light coming down comes to one focus. 19 00:00:58,925 --> 00:01:01,561 Spherical aberration is when one part of the mirror 20 00:01:01,561 --> 00:01:02,896 is slightly higher or lower 21 00:01:02,896 --> 00:01:05,365 than the other and light instead of coming to one 22 00:01:05,365 --> 00:01:07,367 focus from, say, the edge of the mirror 23 00:01:07,367 --> 00:01:08,768 will come over here 24 00:01:08,768 --> 00:01:11,838 and then from the center of the mirror will come to focus up here. 25 00:01:11,838 --> 00:01:14,441 So you get, what that does is blur the focus. 26 00:01:14,441 --> 00:01:17,310 Can almost think of it if you've got bad myopia, 27 00:01:17,310 --> 00:01:20,013 which you can say our telescope has now 28 00:01:20,013 --> 00:01:23,583 and you put your glasses on, you can correct totally and get 2020 vision. 29 00:01:23,583 --> 00:01:25,485 I'll never forget the day of the fabled 30 00:01:25,485 --> 00:01:26,719 press conference at Goddard, 31 00:01:26,719 --> 00:01:29,155 when we had announced to the world that the Hubble was broken 32 00:01:29,155 --> 00:01:30,457 and we didn't know if we could fix it. 33 00:01:30,457 --> 00:01:35,562 We didn't frankly think we could fix it except just before the press conference. 34 00:01:35,562 --> 00:01:37,130 Space Telescope Science Working Group, 35 00:01:37,130 --> 00:01:40,133 a bunch of about 20 astronomers involved with Hubble. 36 00:01:40,133 --> 00:01:43,236 We're meeting at Goddard, coincidentally, that day. 37 00:01:43,236 --> 00:01:45,071 And I ran into John Trauger. 38 00:01:45,071 --> 00:01:47,640 He was a scientist on the wide field camera 39 00:01:47,640 --> 00:01:51,377 one team, the one that was taking all the fuzzy pictures. 40 00:01:51,377 --> 00:01:55,648 And he called me over to the hallway and said, “Ed, I want to tell you something.” 41 00:01:55,648 --> 00:01:59,119 And I said, “What?” “We can fix this.” 42 00:01:59,119 --> 00:02:00,220 I said, “Come on, John. 43 00:02:00,220 --> 00:02:01,254 What do you mean?” 44 00:02:01,254 --> 00:02:04,557 He said, “now that we know the prescription of the mirror, 45 00:02:04,557 --> 00:02:07,026 the shape is perfect, 46 00:02:07,026 --> 00:02:10,730 but it's got the wrong shape, just like your nearsighted eye. 47 00:02:10,730 --> 00:02:15,335 Now that we know the exact prescription to, you know, five or ten decimal points, 48 00:02:15,335 --> 00:02:19,005 there are four little mirrors inside our new camera that we're building. 49 00:02:19,005 --> 00:02:23,243 Our backup camera called the the clone the Wiffpick 2 clone 50 00:02:23,243 --> 00:02:25,612 there are four little called relay mirrors. 51 00:02:25,612 --> 00:02:28,982 If we reground those 52 00:02:28,982 --> 00:02:33,753 with the correction that we know we need in it like glasses for your eyes. 53 00:02:33,753 --> 00:02:36,523 We could solve the problem internally right away. 54 00:02:36,523 --> 00:02:39,159 1993 We go up to fix it.” 55 00:02:39,159 --> 00:02:40,493 I said, “are you sure, John? 56 00:02:40,493 --> 00:02:42,695 Because I'm going to tell the press this.” 57 00:02:42,695 --> 00:02:45,398 He said, “I'm positive.” 58 00:02:45,398 --> 00:02:48,301 So during my press conference, I gave all the nasty things, Oh, 59 00:02:48,301 --> 00:02:49,769 we're not going to take any pictures, 60 00:02:49,769 --> 00:02:52,438 we’re not going to be able to do this. However. 61 00:02:52,438 --> 00:02:54,107 We feel that 62 00:02:54,107 --> 00:02:57,377 we can characterize the problem, the spherical aberration problem, 63 00:02:57,377 --> 00:03:01,247 well enough that we can take advantage of an insurance policy 64 00:03:01,247 --> 00:03:04,651 that we haven't talked much about and it hasn't been in the press much. 65 00:03:04,651 --> 00:03:08,588 And that is we started a long time ago to plan a maintenance program 66 00:03:08,588 --> 00:03:11,991 that is every three years we plan to go up with the space shuttle, 67 00:03:11,991 --> 00:03:15,495 change our instruments, change out things that broke. 68 00:03:15,495 --> 00:03:16,863 Before launch 69 00:03:16,863 --> 00:03:21,901 if you had said what would be success, I would say 50% and the Wiffpick. 70 00:03:21,901 --> 00:03:23,169 But the Wiffpick had to be. 71 00:03:23,169 --> 00:03:27,473 This is the first time NASA ever tried five EVAs, more than 6 hours each. 72 00:03:27,473 --> 00:03:31,044 And to do all these different things Wiffpick, 73 00:03:31,044 --> 00:03:33,513 you know, COSTAR, gyros, solar panels. 74 00:03:33,513 --> 00:03:36,316 I mean we are doing everything except putting in a new kitchen sink. 75 00:03:36,316 --> 00:03:37,784 So we all fly to Houston. 76 00:03:37,784 --> 00:03:39,085 The first EVA started. 77 00:03:39,085 --> 00:03:40,820 Of course all these things happen at night, 78 00:03:40,820 --> 00:03:42,655 but astronomers are used to that. 79 00:03:42,655 --> 00:03:45,191 Every night it became like a dream sequence, 80 00:03:45,191 --> 00:03:48,928 because every night they’d start, they'd get this done, that done Wiffpick went in, 81 00:03:48,928 --> 00:03:51,631 next night they got COSTAR in, next night they got Gyros in. 82 00:03:51,631 --> 00:03:54,667 And by the end of the fifth night, we're looking at each other like, 83 00:03:54,667 --> 00:03:56,736 Are we dreaming or did this happen? 84 00:03:56,736 --> 00:04:00,740 Did we just do five successful EVAs and fix everything? 85 00:04:00,740 --> 00:04:05,278 So we came back from Houston like on top of the world, but it was like, 86 00:04:05,278 --> 00:04:07,213 you know, it's like you had major eye surgery 87 00:04:07,213 --> 00:04:09,882 and the operation was a success, but you still the bandages on 88 00:04:09,882 --> 00:04:12,452 and we had to take the bandages off some time. 89 00:04:12,452 --> 00:04:13,686 We're all looking at this monitor 90 00:04:13,686 --> 00:04:17,991 when the picture was taken and it was just a real rich starfield. 91 00:04:17,991 --> 00:04:21,160 And what we're hoping not to see is a bunch of fuzzy stars 92 00:04:21,160 --> 00:04:23,963 with all kinds of weird rays coming out of them 93 00:04:23,963 --> 00:04:26,232 like they used to be in spherical aberration. 94 00:04:26,232 --> 00:04:27,767 So the image started coming up. 95 00:04:27,767 --> 00:04:29,302 And this is an old Cathode-ray tube 96 00:04:29,302 --> 00:04:30,903 So yeah, 97 00:04:30,903 --> 00:04:33,873 I know this is technology that some of the young people in the audience 98 00:04:33,873 --> 00:04:35,608 don’t even know what I'm talking about, 99 00:04:35,608 --> 00:04:37,810 but it took a while for the image to build up. 100 00:04:37,810 --> 00:04:38,645 And we first saw 101 00:04:38,645 --> 00:04:42,749 a little bright star in the center, and then some fainter stars came up. 102 00:04:42,749 --> 00:04:46,286 More and more stars came up. 103 00:04:46,286 --> 00:04:47,820 You could hear a pin drop. 104 00:04:47,820 --> 00:04:50,823 You you could have heard an atom drop on the floor. 105 00:04:50,823 --> 00:04:52,225 It was so quiet. 106 00:04:52,225 --> 00:04:56,696 And slowly, more and more stars came up and they were sharp. 107 00:04:56,696 --> 00:04:58,631 And there were lots of them. 108 00:04:58,631 --> 00:04:59,532 Lots of them. 109 00:04:59,532 --> 00:05:02,201 Because when you're out of focus, you don't see very faint things. 110 00:05:02,201 --> 00:05:05,271 When you're in focus, you really see deep. 111 00:05:05,271 --> 00:05:09,709 And then the picture was there and it was perfect, absolutely perfect. 112 00:05:09,709 --> 00:05:11,144 And there's still a moment of silence. 113 00:05:11,144 --> 00:05:14,180 And then everybody just went crazy. 114 00:05:14,180 --> 00:05:17,116 Hey, hey, hey. 115 00:05:17,116 --> 00:05:18,351 Right, right. Yeah. 116 00:05:18,351 --> 00:05:22,655 Oh, did it. 117 00:05:22,655 --> 00:05:24,624 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 118 00:05:24,624 --> 00:05:27,960 Bring it down, bring it more. 119 00:05:27,960 --> 00:05:29,295 Oh, come on. 120 00:05:29,295 --> 00:05:31,531 Okay. Not bad. 121 00:05:31,531 --> 00:05:34,801 And I can't describe everybody just hugging each other, 122 00:05:34,801 --> 00:05:37,003 crying tears, you know, 123 00:05:37,003 --> 00:05:39,439 somebody came in with champagne, you know, It was. 124 00:05:39,439 --> 00:05:42,742 It was just a moment I'll never forget as long as I live. 125 00:05:42,742 --> 00:05:44,911 Hubble was fixed. 126 00:05:44,911 --> 00:05:46,079 Total success. 127 00:05:46,079 --> 00:05:46,913 You couldn't have 128 00:05:46,913 --> 00:05:49,982 you couldn't have had had a bigger success in that first servicing mission 129 00:05:49,982 --> 00:05:51,017 when Hubble was launched. 130 00:05:51,017 --> 00:05:52,752 I always thought that, 131 00:05:52,752 --> 00:05:54,053 you know, it would die 132 00:05:54,053 --> 00:05:56,522 and I’d have another ten or 20 years in my career. 133 00:05:56,522 --> 00:06:00,193 And here I retired ten years and it’s still going. 134 00:06:00,193 --> 00:06:05,431 It made me the butt of jokes, it made me 135 00:06:05,431 --> 00:06:08,101 a collector of arrows, slings and arrows from my neighbors. 136 00:06:08,101 --> 00:06:10,470 and the press thought I was a joke. 137 00:06:10,470 --> 00:06:13,139 And seeing where Hubble is now 138 00:06:13,139 --> 00:06:16,175 making those early promises look like nothing. 139 00:06:16,175 --> 00:06:17,977 I mean, piece of cake. 140 00:06:17,977 --> 00:06:20,546 I mean, it’s iconic. 141 00:06:20,546 --> 00:06:24,016 It's the greatest American scientific achievement ever. 142 00:06:24,016 --> 00:06:31,424 It's the great American comeback story. 143 00:06:31,424 --> 00:06:35,061 We should be able to fix it in our insurance program. 144 00:06:35,061 --> 00:06:36,896 I think we're all committed. 145 00:06:36,896 --> 00:06:37,930 Nobody's walking away. 146 00:06:37,930 --> 00:06:41,968 I think we're all committed to work on it and do it right. 147 00:06:41,968 --> 00:06:54,280 Servicing Mission 1 allowed Hubble to continue forward with its mission. 148 00:06:54,280 --> 00:07:08,661 With more than 1.5 million observations, Hubble is one of the most productive scientific instruments ever built. 149 00:07:08,661 --> 00:07:21,674 Thirty years later, Hubble continues making discoveries that change our understanding of the universe. 150 00:07:21,674 --> 00:07:29,982 Follow us on social media @NASAHubble