CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA will
restart the countdown for the space shuttle Discovery Saturday, with plans to
launch the orbiter spaceward on July 26 after more than week of work to pin
down a fuel sensor glitch, mission managers said late Wednesday.
"Right now we think we have
eliminated all the common causes," shuttle program manager Bill Parsons said of
the glitch during a press briefing here at NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC).
"We believe we've done everything we possible could on the vehicle."
Discovery's STS-114 mission, NASA's
first shuttle flight since the 2003 Columbia disaster, is now set to launch at
10:39 a.m. EDT (1439 GMT) on July 26.
Wednesday's announcement comes more than a week after launch controllers scrubbed
Discovery's attempted July 13 space shot. They has discovered that a fuel sensor, one of four that
monitor liquid hydrogen levels inside the shuttle's external tank, failed during a
standard countdown test. Known as engine cut-off (ECO) sensors, the sensor system
is designed to track fuel levels during launch and ensure Discovery's three
main engines shut down properly before the external tank runs dry. If the
engines keep firing without fuel, it would prove disastrous for the orbiter and
its crew.
"This has been a very, very thorough
effort that we've been through," said John Muratore,
manager of shuttle systems engineering and integration, during the briefing.
"We've used every kind of analysis technique and test technique that we can
find."
Shuttle engineers investigating
the anomaly believe that electromagnetic interference from existing or new
hardware, such as additional cameras or heaters attached to the bipod fitting
that connects Discovery to its external tank, and a small grounding issue with
sensor wiring may be the culprit. Additional tests over the next 48 hours
should address those areas, with the launch countdown set to begin at about
12:00 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT) Saturday, Parson said.
But engineers have only a limited
time to complete their troubleshooting efforts inside Discovery's aft
compartment, where the electronics box that processes ECO sensor readings
resides.
"About 20 hours into the countdown
is when you do the cryogenic loading for the [shuttle's] fuel cells," said
Michael Wetmore, director of space shuttle processing at KSC. "We'd absolutely
have to be out of there by then."
While all four hydrogen ECO sensors
are required to perform properly under current flight rules, shuttle officials
said they could make an "exception" for Discovery on launch day if they see a
glitch that they fully understand.
"We expect to have four of four
sensors," Parsons said. "If we can understand that failure and it was a known
failure that we expected...then we might very well be willing to go fly with
three of four sensors, there's good flight rationale behind it."
If shuttle officials see a sensor
failure that they do not expect then they'd have to reassess the situation,
which could take more than 24 hours or push the launch outside of July entirely, Parsons added.
Discovery's launch window runs
through July 31, with the next flight opportunity opening on Sept. 9.
New launch protocols instituted
after the Columbia accident call for optimum lighting levels for the myriad of
still and video cameras watching the shuttle's ascent, as well as good lighting
for the STS-114 crew when they photograph the external tank just after it
separates from the orbiter. Still more daylight is needed during Discovery's International
Space Station (ISS) rendezvous, where station crewmembers will photograph its
tile-lined belly to record and transmit its condition to ground-based
engineers.
Columbia disintegrated during
atmospheric reentry, killing its seven-astronaut crew, on Feb. 1, 2003.
Launch officials said that if
nothing bars a July 26 space shot, flight controllers should have at least four
opportunities to launch Discovery. Additional dates for the flight - should it
fail to fly Tuesday - include the 27th, 29th and 31st
of July.
"We've got a great amount of work in
front of us," Parson said. "But we've all agreed this work is doable, and that
it all takes us to a launch."