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Storm delays Endeavour launch for 24 hours: NASA

by Staff Writers
Cape Canaveral, Florida (AFP) July 12, 2009
A gathering storm forced NASA to cancel for a fourth time the launch of the space shuttle Endeavour on its mission to the International Space station, officials said Sunday.

"Looks like the team is ready but the weather is not. At this time we are no-go," the US space agency's launch director Pete Nickolenko said with little more than 10 minutes to go before the planned takeoff.

The shuttle launch was rescheduled for Monday at 6:51 pm (2251 GMT), Nickolenko said.

The cancellation was forced by a storm system that developed late afternoon near the launch site in Florida and gradually moved within 20 miles (32 kilometers) of launchpad 39A, where the Endeavour and its seven-astronaut crew were waiting to take off.

NASA officials waited until just minutes before liftoff to scrub the launch, hoping that a sea breeze might shift the weather system further afield, as has happened before.

But as the minutes ticked down, there were even reports of lightning strikes within miles of the Kennedy Space Center, forcing the cancellation.

Lightning strikes were responsible for the third of four delays to Endeavour's mission to the International Space Station (ISS) to assemble the Japanese Kibo laboratory.

A Friday night storm produced at least 11 lightning strikes that hit the shuttle's pad, but did not damage the shuttle.

Takeoff had been delayed previously twice after the discovery of potentially hazardous fuel leaks, apparently caused by a misaligned plate linking a hydrogen gas vent line with the external fuel tank.

The US space agency said the problem had been fixed, and had filled Endeavour's external fuel tanks with some two million liters (half a million gallons) of low-temperature liquid hydrogen on Sunday before the launch was scrapped.

NASA weather forecasters had predicted a 70 percent chance of favorable launch conditions, and the agency had run checks on 38 separate items to ensure the shuttle was ready to take off.

Endeavour's crew -- including six Americans and one Canadian -- are expected to install a platform on the ISS for astronauts to conduct experiments in the vacuum of space, 350 kilometers (220 miles) above Earth's surface.

Canadian Julie Payette, an electrical and information engineer, is the only woman on board.

She has been into space before, as have two other members of the crew, including shuttle commander Mark Polansky.

The crew's four other members will be on their maiden space voyage.

American aerospace engineer Tim Kopra, 46, will replace Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, spending several months aboard the floating space station.

He would be the latest addition to the permanent crew of the ISS, which is a joint collaboration between 16 different countries.

The astronauts were also expected also undertake repair and replacement work, including installing six new batteries in the ISS.

That mission will require two astronauts to conduct five space walks totaling 32.5 hours.

Kibo's two pressurized modules were attached to the ISS in 2008, along with the European lab Columbus.

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Lightning delays NASA space shuttle launch
Cape Canaveral, Florida (AFP) July 11, 2009
A dramatic lightning storm forced NASA to delay the space shuttle Endeavour's scheduled launch on Saturday by at least a day, the latest blow to the seven-astronaut mission. NASA announced the delay with just nine hours to go before liftoff, citing 11 lightning strikes near the Cape Canaveral launch site during a powerful electrical storm on Friday evening. "The launch is scrubbed for at ... read more







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