- #36
Astronuc
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
2023 Award
- 21,906
- 6,327
What a way to celebrate 4th of July!
Me too!Ivan Seeking said:So who would go up now fully knowing the high risk involved?
me
Shoshana said:Where is Rocketboy?
6min 40 sec into the flight everything looks good...
Not only WOULD I go, I plan to oneday.Ivan Seeking said:So who would go up now fully knowing the high risk involved?
rocketboy said:Sorry I was too busy playing the launch over and over again.
Not only WOULD I go, I plan to oneday.
Shoshana said:There you are Rocketboy!~
PLAN to go up there huh?
Good. So between Space camp and your actual training might I suggest you keep in shape and see how strong your stomach is, you can stop by us for lunch and my Tuesday special and then catch a cab just before rush hour in midtown Manhattan and tell the driver 20 bucks tip if you can get me there in 15 minutes. Promise he will take every wrong turn and stop short 50+ times.
My son went to space camp and he says visiting Mum in NYC is much more intense.
rocketboy said:lol, I love NYC, such an amazing city. What's the Tues. special?
Evo said:Cool video, don't give up before it hits the water. Click on "Solid Rocket booster video"
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/sts-121_front/index.html
Possibly, it drops by parachute and is hollow - so it is supposed to float - unless the seals leak.Evo said:I know, it made me want to go up. Watching it go up really made me envy the astronauts inside. Damn, if there was a place to sit in that thing, I'd buy a ticket.
It appears that the rocket stayed upright out of the water?
Let's hope for a safe trip home and a safe landing at Kennedy Space Center on Monday morning.Space Shuttle Discovery ended STS-121’s stay at the International Space Station when it undocked at 6:08 a.m. EDT Saturday. Undocking occurred as the two spacecraft flew above the Pacific Ocean north of New Zealand.
Discovery remains on track for a scheduled touch down at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., at 9:14 a.m. Monday.
Successful mission and crew home safely! :tongue2:The STS-121 astronauts returned home today from a successful mission to the International Space Station when Space Shuttle Discovery touched down at Kennedy Space Center, Fla. Landing occurred at 9:14 a.m. EDT.
Discovery gave the United States a birthday present when it launched July 4. STS-121 spent just under 13 days in orbit, with almost nine days at the station. Discovery delivered supplies, equipment and a new Expedition 13 crew member to the orbital outpost.
Shuttle edges to night launches
The US space agency wants at least one more daylight launch for the shuttle before it will allow a night lift-off.
That could be good news also for the Hubble Space Telescope. It requires servicing to extend its life - a mission that can only be conducted by a shuttle. Dr Griffin told BBC News a firm decision would come later in the year.
"We have a lot of data to go through before we know whether or not we can do a Hubble flight; and we will probably announce that this Fall."
They will try to slip out before Ernesto strikes, or they have to roll Atlantis back to the hangar until after Ernesto.NASA Working 'Competing Objectives' on Atlantis Launch
During a Saturday evening press conference, Space Shuttle Program Launch Integration Manager LeRoy Cain said that management and engineering teams spent the day tracking two major issues; the impact of a lighting strike at the launch pad last Friday to shuttle flight and ground systems, and the intensity and direction of Tropical Storm Ernesto.
He went on to say that "he is happy to report that the team has finished their lightning strike reviews', and the vehicle has been cleared for launch." He went on to add that Ernesto has slowed slightly, providing them with a few more hours to track the storm before having to make a final decision whether or not to roll the shuttle back to the safety of the Vehicle Assembly Building. A decision will be made at a meeting early tomorrow morning whether to go ahead with a Tuesday launch, roll the vehicle back to the Vehicle Assembly Building, or pursue other options.
Cool! Hopefully this will light a fire under someone's . . . .BobG said:Russia mulls new space station, missions to Moon, Mars Russians plan to concentrate on a space station that better meets their own needs.
The six Atlantis crew members flew Saturday morning from their home base in Houston to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where they will begin final launch preparations for mission STS-115.
The countdown officially began at 8 a.m. Sunday (this morning), at the T-43 hour mark, which includes over 30 hours of built-in hold time prior to a targeted 12:29 p.m. EDT launch on Wednesday. The launch time is the middle point in the launch window that extends for 10 minutes.
Ugh! Let's try it again tomorrow. :uhh:The launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis has been scrubbed until Saturday due to a problem with one of the vehicle's external tank ECO sensors. NASA managers will hold a press conference no earlier than 12:30 p.m. EDT to discuss the sensor issue and tomorrow's liftoff attempt.
The new launch time for Atlantis is targeted for 11:15 a.m. on Saturday.
The ECO sensor issue arose earlier in today's countdown when launch controllers detected a problem with one of the four ECO sensors inside the hydrogen section of the space shuttle's orange external tank. The sensors monitor hydrogen levels inside of the tank and trigger the orbiter's engines to shutdown when gas levels drop below a specified level.