. | . |
NASA to examine Endeavour shield damage
Washington (AFP) Aug 12, 2007 Astronauts on the International Space Station Sunday are to examine and measure a troublesome gash in the shuttle Endeavour's heat shield, by means of a camera and a laser atop a robotic arm. The 56-square-centimeter (nine-square-inch) gouge near a landing gear hatch was apparently made by a piece of foam that broke off the shuttle's external fuel tank 58 seconds after Wednesday's launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The laser device will provide the exact measurement and depth of the gash so NASA engineers can decide whether repairs are needed, which would entail prolonging the Endeavour mission to allow for an additional spacewalk. Endeavour's mission was initially planned for 11 days, with three space walks. NASA may extend the mission by three days, and add a space walk, after they test a new system that transfers electricity from the ISS to the orbiter, prolonging the life of the shuttle's batteries. Separately, if NASA decides that the damaged shuttle tiles need fixing, an additional space walk is possible. NASA on Saturday studied pictures of the damage and said the gash appears to be less serious than previously believed. "The consensus in the mission management team is -- considering the flight history we had, the location of it -- all are very good signs that it will not be something that we will have to be worried about," said John Shannon, a mission manager, during a press conference. Also on Saturday, Mission specialists Rick Mastracchio of the United States and Canadian Dave Williams spent six hours and 17 minutes installing and activating a new, 1.58-ton segment for the ISS that the Endeavour had delivered. The two astronauts attached the Starboard 5 truss segment to the Starboard 4 segment, with the help of shuttle pilot Charles Hobaugh, who from inside the ISS operated the station's robot arm holding the 3.37 x 4.24-meter (11 x 14-foot) truss. They also retracted a radiator on the Port 6 truss, which will be moved and attached to the Starboard 5 truss during a future mission, replaced a defective gyroscope on the ISS and installed an external stowage platform. Back on Earth, meanwhile, National Aeronautics and Space Administration experts analyzed 296 pictures of Endeavour's heat shield taken during a routine inspection Friday just before the orbiter docked with the ISS. In addition to the gash, small white marks were also visible on other thermal tiles surrounding the damaged area, Shannon told reporters. He said NASA was trying to estimate the extent of the apparent damage, which will not be exactly determined until a closer inspection is carried out with the ISS robotic arm bearing a high-resolution camera and laser device. The foam came off the shuttle's fuel tank, which holds super-cold liquid hydrogen fuel for the takeoff and is jettisoned before orbit is reached. An insulation layer on the tanks is supposed to prevent icing. The US space agency has carefully inspected the orbiter's protective thermal tiles during each of the missions that have followed the shuttle Columbia disaster of February 2003. Columbia's crucial protective heat shield was pierced by a piece of insulating foam that peeled off its external fuel tank during liftoff. The breach resulted in the shuttle disintegrating into a ball of fire as it re-entered Earth's atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts on board. Endeavour docked on Friday with the ISS bringing seven astronauts, including 55-year-old Barbara Morgan, the first school teacher in space. Morgan's space mission came 21 years after the shuttle Challenger launch explosion in 1986 killed another woman intended to become the first teacher-astronaut, Christa McAuliffe. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Shuttle at NASA Watch NASA TV via Space.TV Space Shuttle News at Space-Travel.Com
NASA May Repair Shuttle, Extends Station Mission Three Days Washington (AFP) Aug 12, 2007 NASA specialists on Sunday began analyzing a gash in the shuttle Endeavour's heat shield to decide if it needs repair, and said it was adding three days to the mission to continue work on the International Space Station. |
|
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement |