CBS/AP/ May 24, 2009, 7:26 PM

Atlantis Bids Hubble Final Farewell

Atlantis' astronauts tenderly dropped the Hubble Space Telescope overboard Tuesday, sending the restored observatory off on a new voyage of discovery and saying good bye on behalf of the planet.

Hubble - considered better than new following five days of repairs and upgrades - will never be seen up close by humans again. This was NASA's last service call.

Over the course of five back-to-back spacewalks, the Atlantis astronauts equipped Hubble with a powerful new $132 million camera, a new $88 million spectrograph, six new stabilizing gyroscopes, six fresh batteries, a refurbished fine guidance sensor and a new science data computer, reports CBS News space adviser Bill Harwood.

The astronauts also pulled off two unprecedented repairs, bringing another camera and an imaging spectrograph back to life after failures in 2004 and 2007.

Hubble is now more scientifically powerful than at any point since launch in 1990 and with new gyros and batteries, it should remain operational for at least five more years and possibly more, reports Harwood.

The shuttle and telescope had just crossed the Atlantic, and were soaring 350 miles above the coast of northwestern Africa, when astronaut Megan McArthur used a robot arm to release the snares gripping Hubble. Then the shuttle slowly backed away.

"Hubble has been released," reported commander Scott Altman. "It's safely back on its journey of exploration as we begin steps to conclude ours. Looking back on this mission, it's been an incredible journey for us as well."

Mission Control radioed congratulations: "It's wonderful to see Hubble, the most famous scientific instrument of all time, newly upgraded and ready for action thanks to you."

With Hubble flying on its own again, the seven astronauts looked ahead to Friday's planned landing. But first they had to inspect their ship one last time to make sure it had not been smacked by space junk. The telescope's unusually high orbit had placed the shuttle and its crew at increased risk and, because of the lack of a refuge, prompted NASA to keep a rescue ship on standby until the end of the 11-day flight.

The astronauts persevered through the mission, dealing with stuck bolts, ill-fitting gyroscopes and flyaway shreds of insulation. Two of them were ready to jump into spacewalking action one last time if the telescope's aperture door had not opened Tuesday morning or some other last-minute problem cropped up. None did.

"This morning, you watch us from the pinnacle of human existence, representing the pinnacle of our craft, and leaving Hubble at the apex of its scientific power," Hubble program officials said in a message to the crew.

"Hubble is now ready to resume its role as humankind's most powerful eyes on the universe."

The Hubble team hopes to resume celestial observations by the end of summer, following an intensive series of tests.

As for the space telescope's future, there will be no more visits. Sometime after 2020, NASA will send a robotic craft to steer it back into the atmosphere and a watery grave. The spacewalkers installed a docking ring for just that purpose.

That day, however, was far from the astronauts' minds as they reflected on their success.

"It's a little bittersweet that it's over," telescope repairman Michael Massimino said late Monday after the final spacewalk.

"The big drama's coming," teased pilot Gregory Johnson. "Landing, baby."

For more info:
  • Hubble Space Telescope
  • CBS News space analyst Bill Harwood's "Space Place" updates
  • © 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    31 Comments Add a Comment
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    displeased says:
    Society benefits? Try health and medicine, transportation, public safety, consumer goods, environmental and agricultural resources, computer technology and industrial productivity...just to start. If you want specifics, trying stimulating the brain and read a little about it.
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    displeased says:
    TryTakingMyMoney, I certainly hope you are kidding.
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    TryTakingMyMoney says:
    Are tax payers still funding all this NASA stuff? What has NASA produced for society in the last 20 years? Pictures? If I'm paying for this, how about putting your minds to work trying to find a new energy source here on earth. Is NASA just a bunch of liberals looking for government handouts to fund there fantasy projects and cushy life? Earth to NASA...please find something more productive or we will cut your umbilical.
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    displeased says:
    science is not banned by the Bible, science has proven the truth of the Bible many times in the past and science has had to go to the Bible to even get the first space program satelites into orbit.
    Posted by Aldymac

    Thanks for the opinion but I think science and the bible go in opposite directions. Could you provide an example of how science relied on the bible to start a satellite program? Or I would like to hear any quotes from the bible regarding space that is accurate.
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    number1GI says:
    I am glad the Hubble is repaired and cannot wait to see the pictures it sends back, (I'll have some 8x10 glossies please).
    Outstanding job guys now come home safe
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    displeased says:
    all we can do is look and guess. we will never get that far out into the universe and never figure out where we came from.
    Posted by grabandgo

    Your logic is similar to the folks who were trying to discourage Columbus.
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    dudeboy1 says:
    I found a dead cat.
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    Aldymac says:
    There are more Republicans in favor of the space program than anyone thinks there are. The technology brought out by the program is in use by everyone in this country and every other country in the world today, science is not banned by the Bible, science has proven the truth of the Bible many times in the past and science has had to go to the Bible to even get the first space program satelites into orbit.
    My two cents worth.
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    grabandgo says:
    all we can do is look and guess. we will never get that far out into the universe and never figure out where we came from.
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    Jahhaj says:
    "Yeah!! The Hubble telescope is fixed. Now astrologist can sit on their as, eat doughnuts and take space pictures for another five years."-Posted by sky_five
    ----------------
    And what exactly is it that you do that is so tremendously important? Have you ever contributed any thing to the accomplishments of mankind?
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