NASA calls off Wednesday's shuttle launch
Posted on: Wednesday, 13 July 2005, 13:33 CDT
By Deborah Zabarenko and Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - NASA on Wednesday delayed the launch of its first space shuttle mission since the 2003 Columbia disaster after discovering a problem with one of Discovery's fuel sensors, NASA's launch commentator said.
"We will not be able to fly today," said commentator George Diller.
Discovery was fueled and ready to launch as planned at 3:51 p.m. EDT (1951 GMT) when the problem with the liquid hydrogen fuel sensor occurred at 1:32 p.m. (1732 GMT). The sensor is one of four that detects fuel levels when the tank is nearly empty.
Discovery's astronauts had just been strapped into their spaceship when mission controllers called off the launch.
"There are a lot of long faces in the control room," said Diller.
NASA did not immediately say how long the delay was likely to be but called a news briefing for later on Wednesday.
NASA has until July 31 to launch Discovery. After that it will have to delay until Sept. 9, when the International Space Station again comes into the right position for a shuttle rendezvous after a daylight liftoff.
Discovery's mission is the first shuttle flight since the Feb. 1, 2003, Columbia disaster, when seven astronauts died as their shuttle disintegrated over Texas.
COMPLEX SYSTEM
"It is a complex system. Every little part counts," said astronaut David Wolf during Wednesday's broadcast mission commentary. NASA had problems with the fuel sensors during a fueling test in April.
The problem was the third technical issue to crop up as the countdown clock ticked off the hours to liftoff.
A faulty heater delayed the fueling of the external tank with liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen by more than an hour on Wednesday, and on Tuesday, a falling window cover damaged two heat-resistant tiles near the shuttle's tail.
The weather on Wednesday had also threatened to prevent the launch, said NASA weather officer 1st Lt. Mindy Chavez, because of a 60 percent chance that thunderstorms would occur nearby.
In February, 2003, falling foam knocked a hole in Columbia's wing at liftoff, and superheated gases ate into the breach 16 days later when the spacecraft re-entered Earth's atmosphere for landing, causing the craft to disintegrate.
In addition to testing new safety measures introduced after the Columbia accident, Discovery will deliver much-needed supplies and equipment to the space station.
The station's construction has been stalled since the remaining three-shuttle fleet was grounded after Columbia broke apart.
Discovery's flight also heralds the last chapter for the shuttle fleet, which is set to be retired in 2010 after about 20 construction flights to the station.
NASA's new administrator, Michael Griffin, said the shuttles will be succeeded by a new generation of spacecraft and there is no thought of extending the shuttle fleet's service after that. (Additional reporting by Michael Christie)
Source: REUTERS
Related Articles
- Discovery Set To Depart Station
- NASA Launches Probes On Moon Mission
- NASA's Space Shuttle Atlantis at Launch Pad for Hubble Mission
- NASA's Shuttle Discovery Launches to Fully Power Space Station
- Discovery's Night Launch 'Pure Poetry'
- Shuttle Discovery races toward space station link-up
- Shuttle Discovery Races Toward Space Station Rendezvous
- Astronauts Find No Damage to Space Shuttle Discovery
- Shuttle Discovery launched
- Space shuttle Discovery launched on key mission
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds