To much general dismay, earlier this month NASA officials announced that their Kepler space telescope had gone into a self-imposed “safe mode”, something that the telescope is programmed to do if one of its primary systems is not fully functional. Although the telescope was then rebooted, it shut down again this week and it seems that all is definitely not well with our favourite exoplanet spotter: the mission collaboration announced that the instrument has suffered a critical failure and may never be fully operational again.
The problem seems to lie with the four pesky gyroscope-like “reaction wheels” that help the telescope remain steady and pointed in a particular direction. Last July, one of the wheels ceased to work thanks to a lubrication issue, and it was “retired.” Luckily, although the telescope was kitted out with four wheels, it was designed to run on three at any given point. Of course, you see where this is going now – the recent mishaps have seen a structural failure in another one of the wheels, hobbling the telescope for good, or so it may seem. In its mission update, the Kepler team says that “with the failure of a second reaction wheel, it’s unlikely that the spacecraft will be able to return to the high pointing accuracy that enables its high-precision photometry. However, no decision has been made to end data collection.” It is good to remember, though, that Kepler completed its primary three-and-a-half-year mission, with extreme success one might add, last November, and is now within its extended mission phase.
But it’s not all done and dusted. “I wouldn’t call Kepler down and out just yet,” says John Grunsfeld, a NASA administrator and one-time astronaut who carried out five servicing missions on the Hubble Space Telescope. The Kepler team will now put the telescope into a “Point Rest State” – a sort of induced coma where the craft reduces its fuel consumption and slumbers until researchers are sure how to proceed – meaning the team could have anywhere between months and years before the telescope shuts down completely, according to the mission update.