Celebrating Servicing Mission 4

May 10 to May 24, 2024
The Hubble mission was originally designed to last 15 years – but in May 2024, we marked 15 years just since the last astronaut servicing mission to the telescope!

Using a robotic arm, an astronaut does maintenance work on Hubble. In the top third of the picture, Earth is seen in the background.

Servicing Mission 4 was the final space shuttle mission to Hubble in 2009. Through a series of complex spacewalks, astronauts repaired and upgraded Hubble, setting it up for a long life of continued scientific discovery. On social media, the Hubble team marked this momentous anniversary with a series of posts and new educational resources.

Celebrating Servicing Mission 4

Astronaut Mike Good in his spacesuit with his feet attached to the shuttle's robotic arm works on Hubble against a backdrop of Earth and space.

Hubble Celebrates the 15th Anniversary of Servicing Mission 4

Fifteen years ago, human hands touched NASA's for the last time.

Background image is of the space shuttle Atlantis lifting off. Title in black: Servicing Mission 4

Hubble's Servicing Mission 4 Celebrates Its 15th Anniversary

In May 2009, a brave team of astronauts embarked on a daring journey aboard space shuttle Atlantis.

Three bright stars with diffraction spikes shine near the center-right of the image, illuminating nearby clouds that glow in pale blue. The clouds darken at the edges of the image, and are dotted with smaller stars, some also with diffraction spikes.

Hubble Views the Dawn of a Sun-like Star 

Hubble captured this image of HPTau with its Wide Field Camera 3, installed during Servicing Mission 4.

A worker in a white suit stands next to the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph.

Cosmic Origins Spectrograph

The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, installed during Servicing Mission 4, expanded Hubble’s spectroscopic capabilities.

Hubble's WFC3

Wide Field Camera 3

Installed during Servicing Mission 4, the Wide Field Camera 3 continued the pioneering tradition of previous Hubble cameras, but with critical improvements that expanded the telescope’s voyage of discovery.

Against a gray background, this graphic shows a Hubble image of the Crab Nebula at left. To the right, four repeated images in different colors (green, yellow, orange, and red) show the different present elements in the nebula. Beneath them, a horizontal row seen as a jagged rainbow-colored line represents its spectrum.

Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph

The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, installed during Servicing Mission 2 in 1997, stopped functioning in August 2004 due to a power supply failure. It was repaired during Servicing Mission 4.

History

Hubble's Impact on Human Spaceflight

Astronauts spent a total of 57 days, 15 hours, 48 minutes, and 8 seconds in space on missions to Hubble.

Hubble's more than 30 years in orbit were punctuated by periodic visits from astronauts that kept the telescope functioning smoothly and equipped it with increasingly powerful instruments. These visits provided NASA with a unique opportunity: to observe men and women working together in space while developing ways to improve that experience —make it smoother, easier, and less dangerous.

Read More
Two astronauts work inside the bottom of Hubble while flying over the earth.
Astronauts Steven L. Smith and John M. Grunsfeld, appear as small figures in this wide-angle photograph taken during an extravehicular activity (EVA) in December 1999. On this spacewalk they replaced the rate sensor units (RSUs, or gyroscopes) inside the Hubble Space Telescope.
NASA