XMM out of contact.
Observations suggest it is intact, signal from telescope has been detected,
attempts to recover control underway.
XMM loss of contact - ESA press release
"During the evening of Saturday 18 October, XMM-Newton was approaching the point of closest approach to our planet, or perigee, along its 48-hour highly elongated orbit around Earth. At that time, it was communicating normally with the Santiago ground station in Chile through one of its two antennas. After the spacecraft moved out of visibility from Santiago, its radio signal, routinely switched to the other antenna by a previously uploaded command, was expected to be picked up by ESA's Villafranca ground station in Spain about an hour later. Unfortunately, radio contact was never reestablished."
...
"The situation hinted at either a technical problem on board or, in the worst case, a catastrophic event in orbit, such as a collision with space debris or a meteoroid, or a malfunction of a thruster making the spacecraft tumble wildly, or even an explosion.
Luckily, the worst cases have been ruled out as amateur astronomers in Germany's Starkenburg observatory took images of the sunlit XMM-Newton against the night sky. This showed that the satellite has not fragmented and that it is maintaining a constant attitude in its expected orbit. This was confirmed later by the many other ground-based telescopes across the globe that answered XMM-Newton's call for help.
The subsequent recovery attempt involved a more powerful ground station. ESA's 35 m-diameter antenna at New Norcia (Western Australia), using a radio-science mode developed for deep space missions, finally detected a weak signal from XMM-Newton, showing that the spacecraft is alive."
...
"Engineers hope to be able to reestablish nominal ground contact with XMM-Newton within the next few days. Until then, the spacecraft and instruments should be safe. "
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Even the space telescopes have stopped what they're doing to watch the US election.
Seriously, it's terrifying to imagine if neither XMM nor HST turns back on.
Could something just, for once, go right?
Possibly so, HEASARC says they recovered XMM
http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/xmm/xmmgof.html
There is now good news. XMM is alive and well - see this October 23rd ESA News item. Should be back to observing in a few revolutions.
Thank goodness....