Hubble Servicing In Depth

Hubble servicing mission

Learn about Hubble's final servicing mission and the improvements it will bring to the orbiting observatory.
› Servicing Mission 4
› HD Videos
› What We've Learned
› SM4 Media Guide

Latest Space Shuttle News

Space Shuttle Mission: STS-125

    Scott Altman Image above: Commander Scott Altman sits on the flight deck of space shuttle Atlantis. Photo credit: NASA TV

    Shuttle Crew to Grapple Telescope

    Space shuttle Atlantis will meet up with the Hubble Space Telescope today. The actual grapple of the telescope using the shuttle’s robotic arm is scheduled for 12:54 p.m. EDT as Atlantis soars 340 statute miles above the northeast coast of Madagascar. The telescope will be latched to a high-tech, “lazy Susan” device known as the Flight Support System for the duration of the servicing work.

    The STS-125 crew will perform five spacewalks to refurbish, restore and renew the Hubble Space Telescope. The first spacewalk is scheduled for Thursday.

    Engineers continue to examine the images captured during Tuesday’s inspection of Atlantis’ thermal protection system and exterior surfaces. During that inspection, mission managers noted one area of damage on the forward part of the spacecraft where the wing blends into the fuselage. Initially it appears to be very minor and of no concern for the mission, and the flight team notified the crew late Tuesday that no focused inspection of that particular area is necessary.

    › View the Launch of Atlantis in High Definition (HD)

    STS-125 Additional Resources
    › Mission Summary (407KB PDF)
    › Press Kit (4.8MB PDF)
    › Meet the Crew
    › Learn About the Mission

Shuttle Features

Hubble Flight Tests Toolmakers

Engineer tests mini power tool.

Tool designers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center had to invent several new instruments for the STS-125 mission.

› Read More

COLBERT Ready for Serious Exercise

The COLBERT treadmill

Engineers spent two years designing and building what is suddenly the most famous treadmill in the world - or above it.

› Read More

STS-125 Status Reports

  • STS-125 MCC Status Report #04

    05.13.09 - The crew of Atlantis is ready to meet up with the Hubble Space Telescope 340 miles above the Earth today.

  • STS-125 MCC Status Report #03

    05.12.09 - Atlantis continued to move steadily closer to the Hubble Space Telescope today, and its crew made good use of the time to perform a thorough inspection of the shuttle’s heat shield.

STS-125 Clock

    Atlantis Mission Elapsed Time:

    Days
    Hours
    Min
    Sec

Launch and Landing Coverage

Related Multimedia

STS 125 Mission Extras