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Post subject: Endeavour sits on Launch Pad 39A
Posted: Aug 08, 2007 - 08:39 PM
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Member

Joined: Oct 24, 2002
Posts: 9000
Location: "It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem."~ G.K.C
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"Space Shuttle Endeavour sits on Launch Pad 39A after the Rotating Service Structure was retracted Tuesday night, Aug. 7, 2007, at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Endeavour is scheduled for liftoff Wednesday evening (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)."
NASA Begins Fueling Shuttle for Launch
AP - Wed, 8 Aug 2007 10:23:21 -0400 (EDT)
By RASHA MADKOUR
With good weather forecast for launch time, NASA started fueling space shuttle Endeavour in preparation for a Wednesday evening liftoff and the climax of a two-decade wait for teacher-turned-astronaut Barbara Morgan.
In 1986, Morgan was Christa McAuliffe's backup for the Challenger flight, the shuttle mission that was meant to send NASA's first teacher into space. Morgan was watching from the ground a few miles from the launch pad when the Challenger exploded barely a minute into flight.
Many of the other educators who had competed with McAuliffe and Morgan to become the first teacher in space were in Florida on Wednesday to watch Endeavour finally take one of their own into orbit.
Morgan, 55, will be seated on the lower deck in the middle, the same spot where McAuliffe sat 21 years ago.
"I think the great thing about it is that people will be thinking about Challenger and thinking about all the hard work lots of folks over many years have done to continue their mission," Morgan said last month.
Wednesday morning, NASA began pumping more than 500,000 gallons of supercold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the ship's tank. Forecasters gave NASA an 80 percent likelihood that the weather would be favorable for the scheduled 6:36 p.m. liftoff.
The seven-member crew is slated to spend two weeks at the international space station on a mission to continue construction of the orbiting outpost. They will attach a new truss segment to the space station, replace a gyroscope that helps control the station's orientation, and deliver 5,000 pounds of cargo.
If the mission is extended from 11 days to 14 days, a decision that won't be made until the mission is well under way, the astronauts could add a fourth spacewalk to install protective panels to protect the station from debris.
Endeavour was initially scheduled to lift off Tuesday but was delayed for a day because NASA had to replace a leaky valve in the crew cabin.
The astronauts assigned to the mission included a Canadian doctor, a chemist who knows sign language and is a former competitive sprinter and long jumper, and a commander whose identical twin brother is also a shuttle pilot.
Morgan, who in 1998 became the first teacher to join the astronaut corps -- trained to conduct tasks on a mission, rather than to fly as a guest as McAuliffe had planned -- is scheduled to operate Endeavour's robot arm and oversee the transfer of cargo from the shuttle into the station.
First lady Laura Bush called her Tuesday to congratulate her. While in space, Morgan also plans to answer questions from schoolchildren.
On the Net:
NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov |
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Post subject:
Posted: Aug 09, 2007 - 12:01 AM
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Member

Joined: Sep 18, 2004
Posts: 5199
Location: standing here shaking my head in disbelief....
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I sure wish them well.
Hopefully, everyone will actually be sober.........  |
_________________ When you try to make others look small, you only show how truly tiny your own spirit is.
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