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NASA Begins Fueling Shuttle for Launch
By RASHA MADKOUR, Associated Press Writer
3 hours ago


Space Shuttle Endeavour sits on Launch Pad 39A after ...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - 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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he wont be drinking will he? cause aparently you cant go into space drunk...


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but.... why else would you go to space?

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to get high. duh...


big_pimp_tim-made it cool to roll in the first damn place!
Mon Jun 11 2007 09:27 PM-harley finally rolled with me
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oh wait... i see what you did...

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PJP Offline
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 Originally Posted By: K-nutreturns
he wont be drinking will he? cause aparently you cant go into space drunk...
the teacher is a woman you neanderthal.


Jerry.....I am a few minutes drive form Cape Canaveral right now and will be on the beach watching the shuttle launch at 6:36 pm just 46 minutes away!

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I wish her well, but I really never saw why "teacher in space" was a big deal. Its not like they go up there to actually, you know, teach anyone.

If she was the first civilian in space, that might be something.

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PJP Offline
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the point of it the first time was to have all schools broadcast the shuttle launch (including mine) and then get kids interested in space and science and such.

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Maybe, but was that really going to get the kids interested or the teachers (as a group one of the most self-obessed, self-important there is) interested?

It seems to me the way to get kids interested in anything is to play up the cool technology and adventure of it all, not the fact that a single member of the group that gives them homework is involved.

Unless it was one of those hot female teachers and she was going to fuck one of her students while up there.

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it was 1986 when they wanted to do this and it seemed like a great idea....space shuttles were relatively new still. I think the only reason why they sent Morgan up was to provide some closure to alot of people. I know I enjoyed watching it today.

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 Originally Posted By: PJP
 Originally Posted By: K-nutreturns
he wont be drinking will he? cause aparently you cant go into space drunk...
the teacher is a woman you neanderthal.


Jerry.....I am a few minutes drive form Cape Canaveral right now and will be on the beach watching the shuttle launch at 6:36 pm just 46 minutes away!


Awesome! Wish I could see the shuttle launch in person!

It must have been spectacular to watch!


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it was even cooler hearing the sonic boom when it broke the sound barrier

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 Originally Posted By: PJP
it was 1986 when they wanted to do this and it seemed like a great idea....space shuttles were relatively new still. I think the only reason why they sent Morgan up was to provide some closure to alot of people. I know I enjoyed watching it today.


I agree. People still feel badly about Christa McCauliffe dying in the Challenger explosion, and wanted to see a teacher in space as was supposed to be done over 20 years ago.


"I offer you a Vulcan prayer, Mr Suder. May your

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 Originally Posted By: PJP
it was even cooler hearing the sonic boom when it broke the sound barrier




"I offer you a Vulcan prayer, Mr Suder. May your

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 Originally Posted By: PJP
it was even cooler hearing the sonic boom when it broke the sound barrier


That is indeed awesome. I've seen and heard many aircraft go supersonic in my short life, but nothing really compares to the impact of something as massive and powerful as the shuttle just punching through the sound barrier on its way up. My dad worked on the YF-12 (experimental fighter variant of the A-12/SR-71 spyplane) in the USAF and said that was pretty impressive, but I'd have to hear it for myself to compare the two, which is highly unlikely at this point in history to say the least. The next space transportation system probably won't be quite as stunning.


go.

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NASA Finds Gouge on Endeavour's Belly
By MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer
2 hours ago

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA discovered a worrisome gouge on Endeavour's belly soon after the shuttle docked with the international space station Friday, possibly caused by ice that broke off the fuel tank a minute after liftoff.

The gouge _ about 3 inches square _ was spotted in zoom-in photography taken by the space station crew shortly before Endeavour delivered teacher-astronaut Barbara Morgan and her six crewmates to the orbiting outpost.

"What does this mean? I don't know at this point," said John Shannon, chairman of the mission management team. If the gouge is deep enough, the shuttle astronauts may have to patch it during a spacewalk, he said.

On Sunday, the astronauts will inspect the area, using Endeavour's 100-foot robot arm and extension beam. Lasers on the end of the beam will gauge the exact size and depth of the gouge, Shannon said, and then engineering analyses will determine whether the damage is severe enough to warrant repairs.

The gouge _ white against the black tiles on the underside of Endeavour _ is several feet from the starboard main landing gear door. It appears to be the result of ice, although engineers are not positive; the damage could have been caused by a piece of foam insulation that came off the external fuel tank.

Radar images show a white spray or streak coming off Endeavour 58 seconds after liftoff. Engineers theorize that if the debris was ice, it pierced the tile and then broke up, scraping the area downwind. Pictures from Friday's photo inspection show downwind scrapes.

Even though it was an extremely hot day in Florida, the fuel tank was loaded with super-cold fuel, which could have allowed dangerously big chunks of ice to form on its surface.

Shannon said it is uncertain how big the debris was. A 1.67-pound chunk of foam led to Columbia's catastrophic re-entry in 2003.

Ice is heavier than foam, however, and would cause more damage.

In all, nine pieces of debris, mostly foam, came off the fuel tank during Wednesday evening's liftoff, and three were believed to have struck the shuttle. Shannon said further analysis of the photos from Friday's inspection could uncover more damage.

Mission Control quickly notified the seven shuttle astronauts, including Morgan, of the damage.

Commander Scott Kelly was at the controls when Endeavour performed the orbital backflip earlier in the day so the space station crew could photograph the belly and check for any damage.

While still 625 feet out, Kelly steered Endeavour through a complete somersault so the three space station residents could photograph the shuttle's belly. The 210-mile-high backflip _ which lasted nine minutes and spanned the entire Atlantic _ has been standard procedure ever since the Columbia disaster, providing a rare camera view of the shuttle's often-nicked underside.

Space station astronaut Clay Anderson videotaped the backflip, while his two Russian crewmates snapped furiously away on digital cameras equipped with high-powered zoom lenses. Nearly 300 digital pictures were beamed back to Earth.

Shortly afterward, Endeavour pulled up to the space station and neatly parked as the two spacecraft soared above the South Pacific. The shuttle will remain at the outpost for at least a week.

Morgan's entrance into the space station was dramatic, to say the least.

Her shuttle crewmates, all but one of whom floated in ahead of her, resembled paparazzi as they photographed her coming through the hatch. The station residents also captured the moment with cameras. She paused, as the flashes popped, a video camera running in her right hand and sunglasses pushed up on her forehead.

Morgan _ who was Christa McAuliffe's backup for Challenger's tragic mission in 1986 _ briefly set aside her camera to hug the three space station residents, then took more video of the crowded outpost. She plans to use the video for educational events after the mission.

Endeavour is delivering several new space station parts, most notably a 2-ton square-shaped beam that will be hooked up to the orbiting outpost on Saturday. The astronauts also will install a giant storage platform for spare parts and a new gyroscope that will replace one that is broken.

For the first time, a docked shuttle will draw power from the space station using a new system being tested by Endeavour. If the system works as advertised, NASA will extend Endeavour's flight from 11 days to 14 days, allowing the shuttle to remain docked at the station for a record 10 days.

Of the 10 people aboard the joined spacecraft, Morgan is clearly the attention-getter. The former Idaho elementary schoolteacher backed up McAuliffe during Challenger's short-lived mission and was invited by NASA into the astronaut corps 12 years later. The Columbia disaster further delayed her trip into space.

___

Associated Press writer Liz Austin Peterson in Houston contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov


"I offer you a Vulcan prayer, Mr Suder. May your

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heh


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They just don't want to start school! I'd just about go into space too!


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And before you show up, Nooneman, go fuck off yourself and spread freaky bunny's shaving scum on your melba toast!


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