By Paul Brinkmann
The Hubble Space Telescope captures the Eagle Nebula's Pillars of Creation, one of Hubble's most iconic and popular images. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
Dec. 7 (UPI) -- The Hubble Space Telescope has returned to full operation after more than a month of interruptions due to communication trouble with the orbiting observatory, NASA said Tuesday.
The historic space telescope, which has revealed startling images of stars, galaxies and other space objects since 1990, sent error codes to NASA starting Oct. 23. The observatory instruments shut automatically in a safe mode Oct. 25 as the communication problems continued.
The Hubble Space Telescope captures in infrared light the Eagle Nebula's Pillars of Creation, one of Hubble's most iconic and popular images. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
"NASA's Hubble Space Telescope team recovered the Imaging Spectrograph on Monday ... and is now operating with all four active instruments collecting science," NASA said in a press release.
"The team will continue work on developing and testing changes to instrument software that would allow them to conduct science operations" even if members encounter more communication problems, NASA said.
NASA plans to launch the James Webb Space Telescope from the European Space Agency's launch site in South America on Dec. 22. It would provide a new, more powerful space observatory. NASA has hoped that the Hubble and Webb telescopes would work in tandem.
The Hubble Space Telescope captures an image of the giant nebula NGC 2014 and its neighbor NGC 2020 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
The Hubble Space Telescope captures the Eagle Nebula's Pillars of Creation, one of Hubble's most iconic and popular images. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
Dec. 7 (UPI) -- The Hubble Space Telescope has returned to full operation after more than a month of interruptions due to communication trouble with the orbiting observatory, NASA said Tuesday.
The historic space telescope, which has revealed startling images of stars, galaxies and other space objects since 1990, sent error codes to NASA starting Oct. 23. The observatory instruments shut automatically in a safe mode Oct. 25 as the communication problems continued.
The Hubble Space Telescope captures in infrared light the Eagle Nebula's Pillars of Creation, one of Hubble's most iconic and popular images. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
"NASA's Hubble Space Telescope team recovered the Imaging Spectrograph on Monday ... and is now operating with all four active instruments collecting science," NASA said in a press release.
"The team will continue work on developing and testing changes to instrument software that would allow them to conduct science operations" even if members encounter more communication problems, NASA said.
NASA plans to launch the James Webb Space Telescope from the European Space Agency's launch site in South America on Dec. 22. It would provide a new, more powerful space observatory. NASA has hoped that the Hubble and Webb telescopes would work in tandem.
The Hubble Space Telescope captures an image of the giant nebula NGC 2014 and its neighbor NGC 2020 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo
The Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of the Galaxy UGC 2885, which may be the largest in our universe. Photo by B. Holwerda/NASA
Hubble also experienced a month-long pause this summer when one of its main computers shut down, but NASA was able to switch to a backup computer and restart the spacecraft.
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