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Endeavour Set For Early Monday Launch

by Staff Writers
Cape Canaveral, Florida (AFP) Feb 7, 2010
The launch of the US space shuttle Endeavour was delayed by 24 hours early Sunday due to bad weather over the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, NASA officials said.

The delay was caused by heavy cloud cover over Cape Canaveral, officials from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said.

"We tried really, really hard to work the weather, but it's just too dynamic," explained NASA's launch director Mike Leinbach. "We are just not comfortable to launch the shuttle tonight. So, we have a 24-hour scrub."

Endeavour's next launch attempt was scheduled for Monday at 4:14 am (0914 GMT).

The mission management team was expected to meet at 6:15 pm (2315 GMT) Sunday to give the "go" to fill the shuttle's external fuel tank with propellants. Tank loading would begin soon after the meeting.

The decision to postpone the launch comes as NASA begins to reevaluate its future after President Barack Obama effectively abandoned the US space agency's plan to send astronauts back to the moon by 2020.

The Constellation program was intended to develop a successor spacecraft to the shuttle, which could be used to carry astronauts to the moon where they would use a lunar base to launch manned missions to Mars.

Constrained by soaring budget deficits, Obama submitted a budget to Congress that encourages the agency to instead focus on developing commercial transport alternatives to ferry astronauts to the ISS after the shuttle program ends.

There are just five missions scheduled for NASA's three shuttles before the program is scheduled to wind down later this year. The first shuttle launch was in 1981.

The Endeavour mission's main goal is the delivery of the Tranquility module, also known as Node 3, which comes with a multi-window cupola attached.

The cupola, built for NASA by the European group Thales Alenia Space in their Turin factory, will allow for panoramic views of Earth, space objects and spacecraft arriving at the ISS, the US space agency said.

"Everything thus far is going exceedingly well," NASA test director Jeff Spauling told journalists during a press conference.

With Endeavour's delivery of Tranquility, the International Space Station will be 90 percent complete, NASA said.

Tranquility, which weighs 18 tonnes, is seven meters long and has a 4.5 meter (15 foot) diameter, while the cupola dome weighs 1.9 tonnes, and measures 1.5 meters with a 2.9 meter diameter.

Installing the module is expected to require a team of two astronauts to undertake three spacewalks lasting 6.5 hours each.

Tranquility, named after the lunar sea where Apollo 11 landed, has the most sophisticated life support system ever flown into space.

It has air revitalization, oxygen generation and water recycling systems and also contains a waste and hygiene compartment for the crew.

The cupola attached to Tranquility boasts six windows arrayed along its sides as well as a central window -- all built with protection against the impact of tiny meteorites -- that will offer an unprecedented panoramic view for those onboard.

But the cupola will also serve an important work function, accommodating two crew members at a time, and is equipped with portable workstations that can control station and robotic activities.

The view will allow the crew to monitor spacewalks and docking operations, NASA said.

The ISS, a joint project involving 16 countries, has cost around 100 billion dollars, mostly provided by the United States.

Under Obama's new budget, the floating research station could see its life extended by five years until 2020.

Meanwhile, NASA will work on sponsoring commercial development of new US spacecraft that can ferry astronauts to the ISS after the shuttle program ends.

Astronauts will have access to Russia's Soyuz craft for transport to the station, but the US space agency will be called upon to help a US private sector alternative.



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SHUTTLE NEWS
Shuttle Endeavour To Bring Tranquility To ISS
Moscow, Russia (RIA Novosti) Feb 01, 2010
Space shuttle Endeavour is to deliver on February 9 a new technological module, Tranquility, to the International Space Station for its U.S. segment, a NASA expert said Friday. Members of the Apollo 11 mission, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, stepped down from the lunar lander onto the moon's Sea of Tranquility on July 20, 1969. The Tranquility module was named in honor of this event's 40t ... read more







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