No danger to ISS from space junk: NASA
Washington (AFP) March 16, 2009 A piece of space junk from a Soviet satellite does not pose a threat to the International Space Station or the Discovery shuttle as it races through space to dock with it, NASA said Monday. "We will not need to perform the debris avoidance maneuver," mission control in Houston told the seven-member crew on board the space shuttle, after tracking the debris for hours. Hours after Discovery's launch on Sunday, NASA said it was tracking a 10-centimeter (four-inch) piece of debris believed to be from the Soviet-era Kosmos 1275 satellite, which disintegrated shortly after it was launched in 1981. Initial projections put the object on a trajectory that would take it to within three-quarters of a kilometer (2,600 feet) of the International Space Station, causing teams in Houston and Moscow to prepare a plan to move the ISS from its orbit if necessary. But NASA called off the "debris avoidance maneuver" after new information showed that the rubble was outside the ISS's danger zone. The space junk threat was the second in as many weeks to threaten the ISS. Last week, the space station's three-member crew had to temporarily evacuate the space station and seek shelter in a Soyuz capsule when a small piece of debris passed about 4.5 kilometers (2.7 miles) from the ISS. A debris avoidance maneuver could not be undertaken last week because the Discovery shuttle was scheduled to launch on Sunday, and the ISS had to maintain its altitude, NASA officials told AFP. LeRoy Cain, head of the mission management team, told a news conference on Monday that while NASA was "constantly mindful" of space rubble, having "one or two or three in short period of time is not anything significant." Asked if the piece of rubble might pose a threat to the shuttle when it reaches the same orbit as the ISS, Cain said: "There is an ongoing assessment, in terms of these kinds of debris issues... But between now and docking, I don't think it will become an issue." Discovery is scheduled to dock with the space station at 2113 GMT Tuesday, the second full day of a 13-day mission. Related Links Station at NASA Station and More at Roscosmos S.P. Korolev RSC Energia Watch NASA TV via Space.TV Space Station News at Space-Travel.Com
ISS Partners Rule Out Turning Life On Orbiter Into Reality Show Moscow (RIA Novosti) Mar 13, 2009 Roscosmos and NASA have decided not to pursue a U.S.-initiated idea to make life on the International Space Station (ISS) a reality show, the Russian Space Agency announced on Thursday. |
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