Discovery crew moves tons of cargo to space station
Posted on: Sunday, 31 July 2005, 03:18 CDT
By Jeff Franks
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Discovery astronauts on the first shuttle trip to the International Space Station since 2002 -- and perhaps the last one for some time -- worked on Sunday to unload tons of supplies and equipment brought from Earth for the station's two-man crew.
The shuttle astronauts originally had planned to give the station 15 tons of items stowed in an Italian-made cargo unit but were adding computers, office supplies, food, water and other items scrounged from Discovery in case there are no more shuttle flights for a while.
"We're looking forward to lots of nice goodies coming across (from the shuttle)," a space station controller at Johnson Space Center in Houston told the station astronauts.
NASA said on Saturday that Discovery's mission would be extended by a day to give the astronauts time to unload the extra cargo. Return to Earth now is set for Aug. 8.
With Wendy Lawrence in charge of the cargo operation, the shuttle crew worked with space station astronauts Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips to unload Raffaello, as the cargo unit is called.
As space opened in Raffaello, they were to fill it back up with 13 tons of space junk that has piled up on the station since it last linked up with a shuttle in November 2002.
Resupply of the space station took on added urgency on Wednesday when the U.S. space agency announced it would ground the shuttle fleet after videos showed insulating foam from Discovery's external fuel tank breaking loose as the shuttle launched from Florida.
Loose foam from the fuel tank was blamed for the Columbia disaster on Feb. 1, 2003, and was not supposed to happen again after NASA spent $1 billion and 2 1/2 years supposedly fixing the problem.
Discovery was the first shuttle to fly since Columbia. NASA said none of its three shuttles will go into space again until the foam problem is solved.
Russian spacecraft have filled in for the shuttle to ferry supplies to the $95 billion space station but they cannot transport as much cargo or the large modules used to piece together the still-unfinished outpost.
Discovery suffered a few nicks to its protective tile at launch because of flying debris but deputy shuttle program manager Wayne Hale said laser and television scans of the orbiter showed no major problems.
NASA engineers studying the scan data had declared 90 percent of Discovery's outer shell safe for return to Earth and were expected to give full, final approval on Monday, he said.
A briefcase-size piece of foam collided with Columbia's wing at launch and broke a hole in its heat shield. The shuttle disintegrated over Texas as it glided toward landing in Florida because superheated gases entered the breach and destroyed its structure. The seven astronauts on board died.
As the cargo operation was under way on Sunday, several astronauts were to take time out for television interviews from space.
Steve Robinson and Japan's Soichi Noguchi, who made a seven-hour spacewalk on Saturday to test damage-repair techniques and perform repairs to the space station, were making preparations for another spacewalk on Monday.
Source: REUTERS
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