Astronaut
Eileen Collins explained to an agog David Letterman Tuesday night that the
space shuttle goes from zero to 17,500 miles per hour in less than nine
minutes.
"You are
hauling," she acknowledged to laughter.
On "The
Late Show" on CBS, Letterman prepared a sight gag for the commander of
Discovery's recent mission -- a "zero gravity" coffee cup floating on a wire.
"When
you're in outer space, everything is weightless. Everything floats," he said,
try to manipulate the cup by its handle as water sloshed out.
"You need a
way to keep the water in there," Collins said when she saw it.
She
outlined the basics of Discovery's mission for the talk-show host, answering
his questions about the speed and sensations of launch. "If you had not trained
to launch in a space shuttle, you'd be terrified," she said.
Collins
also reiterated the crew's commitment to exploring space, despite the loss of
seven friends in the Columbia disaster.
"We believe
that's what the Columbia astronauts would have wanted us to continue doing,"
she said to applause.
She said
she had no safety concerns about her flight, given the "labor of love" for
workers in the space program.
Still,
Collins said, "The shuttle program has been tremendously successful, but it's
time to move on to something else."
Tonight,
Collins, a native of Elmira, N.Y., and her crewmate Charlie Camarda, a Queens,
N.Y., native, will toss out first pitches together at the New York Mets
baseball game.
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