CAPE CANAVERAL - Shuttle
Discovery rolled out to its Kennedy Space Center launch pad Sunday, marking the
start of a final push to the planned Oct. 23 launch of an International Space
Station assembly mission.
The schedule, however, is
extremely tight.
NASA has but one day of
leeway, so any significant technical problems could force the agency to
readjust the launch schedule.
"It's not a lot of
extra time. But you have to take things one step at a time," KSC spokesman
Allard Beutel said. "If something else crops up that we have to deal with,
then we'll have to deal with it."
NASA is facing a
presidential deadline to finish the station and retire its shuttle fleet by
Sept. 30, 2010.
So Sunday marked three
years and counting for 13 more station assembly flights and a Hubble Space
Telescope servicing mission.
NASA had hoped to fly five
station assembly missions this year, but a hailstorm in February damaged a
shuttle external
tank on the pad, delaying the first 2007 flight to June.
The upcoming Discovery launch
will be the third this year, and NASA will have just a seven-day window between
Dec. 6 and Dec. 13 to send up a fourth and final 2007 flight.
After that, the sun angle
on the station would be such that its solar wings could not generate enough
electricity to power both the outpost and a docked shuttle orbiter.
In addition, radiators on
the linked spacecraft would not be able to shed enough of the heat generated
during docked operations. The next launch opportunity would be about Jan. 2.
Discovery rolled up onto its
oceanfront launch pad about six hours after it emerged from the KSC Vehicle Assembly Building.
A tracked
crawler-transporter built for the Apollo moon-landing project lifted the
shuttle and its mobile launcher platform -- an 11 million-pound load -- and
started moving at 6:47 a.m.
Top speed during the 3.5
mile trek: 0.9 mph.
The prime payload for the
Discovery mission -- the
U.S. Harmony module -- already is at the pad and will be installed in the
shuttle's 60-foot-long cargo bay later this week.
Equipped with six hatches,
the cylindrical element will serve as a pressurized gateway to
still-to-be-launched European and Japanese science laboratories.
Coming up next week: a
launch-day dress rehearsal.
A crew led by veteran
astronaut Pam Melroy, who will become only the second
woman to command a shuttle mission, will board Discovery at the pad and
take part in the final hours of a two-day practice countdown.
The astronauts will arrive
at KSC next Sunday and also will go through emergency training at the pad.
Shuttle program managers
also will meet at KSC next week for a two-day technical review. A first, the
review will provide a forum for managers to discuss technical issues before
briefing top agency executives during a traditional flight readiness review.
A firm launch date for
Discovery will be set at the latter review, scheduled for Oct. 16 at KSC.
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