NASA Plans Early Shuttle Return
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HOUSTON (AP) – The astronauts aboard the shuttle Endeavour and the international space station prepared Saturday for the last spacewalk of their joint mission, an outing that was scaled back because of approaching Hurricane Dean.
NASA shortened the spacewalk by two hours to bring Endeavour back to Earth on Tuesday, a day early, just in case the storm veered toward the Houston home of Mission Control.
Spacewalkers Dave Williams and Clay Anderson were set to spend about 4½ hours installing a shuttle inspection boom stand to the station and securing an antenna mount. The rest of the original itinerary involved several space station chores that could be done later.
The two astronauts will be extra careful, avoiding any sharp edges, so they don’t rip a glove and have to rush back inside. They also will frequently check their gloves for any damage.
The mission’s third spacewalk was cut short on Wednesday when astronaut Rick Mastracchio noticed he’d pierced the thumb of his left glove. The slit penetrated only the top two layers of his five-layer glove.
Hurricane Dean is currently aiming for Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. If it looks like the storm might veer toward Houston, Mission Control could be forced to relocate to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The operations at Cape Canaveral would not be as good and there would be fewer controllers, which is why NASA opted to bring the shuttle home a day early. Endeavour is now set to undock from the space station on Sunday.
Shuttle managers also decided Friday to put off fuel-tank preparations for the next launch until engineers decide how to best solve the latest foam-loss problem.
A piece of foam, ice or a combination of both broke off the tank during Endeavour’s launch last week and shot into the shuttle’s belly, carving out a deep gouge that triggered a week of furious thermal analyses.
The concern was not that Endeavour might be destroyed like Columbia was in 2003, but rather that heat exposure during re-entry might weaken the aluminum frame and require lengthy post-flight repairs.
Mission managers decided Thursday that the damage wasn’t bad enough to assign astronauts the risky task of repairing the gash during Saturday’s spacewalk.
Foam has come off that same part of the tank – a bracket that holds the liquid oxygen feed line in place – on previous flights.
LeRoy Cain, a ranking member of the mission management team, said the redesign to the area in question probably will not delay the next mission, currently targeted for October. But it could well postpone some of the flights after that, he said.
For the next launch, engineers are thinking about trimming off some of the foam on those brackets. They also may consider putting an oil or solution on the foam’s surface, so condensation would be less likely to build up and ice would be less likely to form.
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On the Net:
NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov
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AP Aerospace Writer Marcia Dunn contributed to this report from Cape Canaveral, Fla.