The launch
pad delivery of a container filled with new equipment bound for the Hubble
Space Telescope next month has been delayed by at least a day due to loose insulation,
space agency officials said Wednesday.
NASA
workers were set to move Hubble's delicate replacement parts to Launch
Pad 39A at the agency's Kennedy Space Center on Thursday to be installed aboard
the space shuttle Atlantis for a planned
Oct. 10 launch, but will now have to clean up bits of insulation before
making the move, said Allard Beutel, a NASA spokesperson at the center there in
Cape Canaveral, Fla.
The
insulation came loose while shuttle technicians were installing a
plastic-wrapped cargo carrier containing some of Hubble's replacement batteries
and the new Wide Field Camera 3 into a container for the short trip to the
launch pad.
"We
basically have some insulation particles floating around inside the protective
bagging," Beutel told SPACE.com, adding that technicians now have to
open the bag and clean up any contamination before proceeding. "So right now
we're probably looking at probably a 24-hour delay to going out to the launch
pad with the payload."
NASA is
still targeting an Oct. 10 launch for Atlantis' STS-125
mission to Hubble while engineers assess how much time the clean up work
might require. Commanded by veteran spaceflyer Scott Altman, Atlantis
astronauts plan to stage five back-to-back spacewalks to install new
instruments, batteries, gyroscopes, as well as make unprecedented repairs and add
a docking berth to Hubble. The mission, NASA's fifth and final planned Hubble overhaul, is expected to run about 11 days and
extend the telescope's orbital life through 2013.
Beutel said
NASA engineers are optimistic that the insulation clean up job will be quick,
and mission managers have not yet indicated any plans to delay Atlantis' launch
date.
"They'll
adjust it if they have to, but at the moment there's no need to," Beutel said,
adding that Atlantis' payload could be delivered to the seaside launch pad by
late Friday if all goes well.
Meanwhile,
NASA officials are also working to clean up the agency's Johnson Space Center
in Houston after Hurricane Ike battered that center with rain and caused minor
damage last week. Space agency officials have said the repair work should not
have an impact on Atlantis' planned launch, though it did delay the arrival
of an unmanned Russian cargo ship at the International Space Station by
several days.
NASA is
also preparing to roll
a second space shuttle, Atlantis' sister ship Endeavour, to Launch Pad 39A
early Thursday, marking the first time since 2001 that two orbiters were in
launch position.
Endeavour
is being prepared for a planned November mission to the space station, but must
first serve as a rescue ship for the Hubble shuttle flight. Because they must
fly to a higher orbit and in a different inclination than the space station to
reach Hubble, Atlantis astronauts will not be able to reach the safe haven of
the orbiting laboratory if their shuttle suffers critical damage.
Instead,
NASA will ready Endeavour and a small, four-astronaut crew for the unlikely
event a rescue is required. Upon Atlantis' safe return home, Endeavour is due
to move to Launch Pad 39B for a planned Nov. 12 liftoff, NASA officials have
said.