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NASA: Fuse space telescope reaches end of life

posted onOctober 9, 2007
by hitbsecnews

Having coaxed all the life they can out of an 8-year-old ultraviolet light-detecting space telescope, scientists will reluctantly turn it off later this month.

After that, NASA's Fuse observatory will be "just another piece of space junk," orbiting the Earth every 100 minutes until it falls back to Earth in about 30 years, said Bill Blair, the Fuse operations chief and an astronomy professor at Johns Hopkins University.

Fuse, short for Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer, has been tuned to the short ultraviolet wavelengths that the Hubble Space Telescope can't see. Fuse has complemented its more famous cousin, detecting a circle of hot gas that surrounds the Milky Way and finding evidence of molecular hydrogen in Mars' atmosphere.

The $108 million observatory has given more than expected when launched in 1999. NASA extended Fuse's mission three times.

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