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No New Shuttle Flight Unless Rescue Mission Can Be Guaranteed
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/shuttle-05y.html Washington (AFP) Mar 22, 2005 The United States will not resume shuttle flights unless it has a support shuttle ready to carry out rescues in space, the US space agency said Tuesday. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration suspended shuttle missions after the Columbia disaster in February 2003. It had hoped to stage a new flight in May this year with the shuttle Discovery. But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. "In the unlikely event that all of our efforts to reduce risk and safely return the space shuttle to flight have failed, we have made plans to keep the space shuttle crew on the International Space Station and mount a rescue mission," NASA said in its latest report on preparations for shuttle flights. "For the near term, we will not launch a space shuttle unless the second shuttle can be prepared and launched within the time the International Space Station can provide accommodation for the first shuttle's crew." Atlantis is generally considered the reserve shuttle of the three remaining vessels. NASA said a rescue mission would only be carried out "in the most dire of circumstances and will not be used to justify flying unsafely." Columbia broke up as it re-entered Earth's atmosphere on February 1, 2003, killing all seven crew. Following criticism of NASA procedures, the other three shuttles have been grounded since. All rights reserved. © 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse. -- -------------- Jacques :-) www.spacepatches.info |
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![]() "Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. |
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Maybe the more precise way to say it is 'don't count on on another
S.T.S. launch again'? |
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Jim Oberg wrote:
"Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. After STS-114, Discovery's next flight is scheduled for December. Presumably the plan is to hurry through the minimal turnaround work so that it can be ready for a hypothetical STS-301 rescue mission in August, then do the rest of the preparation for STS-115 once STS-121 is safely back on the ground. Just how quickly can the turnaround be done? How much can STS-114 slip before STS-121 is forced to slip into the September window (or later)? For that matter, does the minimal turnaround needed to be ready for a rescue mission result in much extra work in preparing for the subsequent nominal mission? John. -- -- Over 2500 webcams from ski resorts around the world - www.snoweye.com -- Translate your technical documents and web pages - www.tradoc.fr |
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In article ,
"Jim Oberg" wrote: "Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. Can a rescue mission be launched without a guaranteed rescue rescue mission? -- Free men own guns, slaves don't www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/5357/ |
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![]() John Wilcock wrote: Just how quickly can the turnaround be done? How much can STS-114 slip before STS-121 is forced to slip into the September window (or later)? For that matter, does the minimal turnaround needed to be ready for a rescue mission result in much extra work in preparing for the subsequent nominal mission? As ISS got started up, didn't KSC do a lot of preperation for a high flight rate, and tighter turn-around times. For example, during the brief stand-down after STS 93 weren't Endeavour, Atlantis and Discovery essentially in different processing stages at the same time so they could be launched in rapid succession (STS 103, STS 99, STS 101) once they were flying again? Of course post-Columbia, I don't think NASA is in any position to demand "faster" work from KSC employees and that for the near future, shuttles will be undergoing some closer inspection while in the turn-around flow. -A.L. |
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"Nick Hull" wrote in message
... In article , "Jim Oberg" wrote: "Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. Can a rescue mission be launched without a guaranteed rescue rescue mission? Now wouldn't that be something with all three shuttles simultaneously in space! -- Andy P. Jung Metairie, Louisiana U.S.A. (Home of Senator David Vitter) http://www.JungWorld.com/ To reply via e-mail, please visit my web site. |
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If a rescue flight could be guarenteed, then it wouldn't be needed.
-- Gene Seibel Space Ship One - http://pad39a.com/gene/ss1.html Because I fly, I envy no one - except Mike Melvill. |
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![]() "Nick Hull" wrote in message ... In article , "Jim Oberg" wrote: "Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. Can a rescue mission be launched without a guaranteed rescue rescue mission? Yes, in fact it's the only way it can be launched. -- Free men own guns, slaves don't www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/5357/ |
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In article ,
"Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)" wrote: "Nick Hull" wrote in message ... In article , "Jim Oberg" wrote: "Jacques van Oene" wrote But NASA said a new flight would not be held if a second shuttle could not be launched in time to rescue a crew on the International Space Station. The unwritten subtext is -- don't count on STS-121 going in July. Can a rescue mission be launched without a guaranteed rescue rescue mission? Yes, in fact it's the only way it can be launched. Of course the rescue rescue mission must be launched much faster since the space station if filling up fast. -- Free men own guns, slaves don't www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/5357/ |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Engineers test the first engine for NASA's return to flight mission | Jacques van Oene | Space Shuttle | 1 | July 19th 04 06:45 PM |
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