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Extended delay for European lab | Extended delay for European lab |
(about 11 hours later) | |
Nasa says work on the Atlantis space shuttle's problematic fuel sensor system will push back the launch of the Columbus lab to perhaps February. | Nasa says work on the Atlantis space shuttle's problematic fuel sensor system will push back the launch of the Columbus lab to perhaps February. |
The European module was supposed to fly to the space station on the orbiter in December before erratic sensors led to the lift-off being scrubbed. | The European module was supposed to fly to the space station on the orbiter in December before erratic sensors led to the lift-off being scrubbed. |
There is now an option for a 24 January launch, but February looks more likely. | There is now an option for a 24 January launch, but February looks more likely. |
The space agency says engineers need more time to fix a suspected faulty electrical connector in the system. | |
The sensors, which sit at the base of the shuttle's giant external tank, are part of a backup emergency system to cut off the orbiter's three main engines if they run out of hydrogen propellant before the ship reaches orbit. | The sensors, which sit at the base of the shuttle's giant external tank, are part of a backup emergency system to cut off the orbiter's three main engines if they run out of hydrogen propellant before the ship reaches orbit. |
Running the engines without fuel could trigger a catastrophic explosion. | Running the engines without fuel could trigger a catastrophic explosion. |
Recent issues | |
For more than two years now, these eco-sensors, as they are known, have intermittently given out false readings. | |
Technicians think they know the source of the problem but admit to being puzzled over why a "design fault" should only recently start to create issues after many years of normal behaviour. | |
Nasa flight control teams and ground operations teams have been told to be ready for a 24 January launch date. As work progressed on the fuel sensor system, that date would be modified as required, said John Shannon, deputy manager for the space shuttle programme. | |
"Everything has to go exactly right for us to make the 24th," he warned. | |
Engineers continue to test modifications to the system connector in a simulator as they make those changes on the Atlantis tank itself. The modifications are expected to be in place by 10 January. | |
"We're fairly confident that if the problem is where we think it is, that this will solve that," Mr Shannon added. | |
Busy Europe | |
Officials stressed 24 January was a "no earlier than" date. | |
"I think it's much more likely that we'll be going to be ready somewhere in the February 2 to 7 timeframe, given that we don't have any more findings as we go through our testing," said programme manager Wayne Hale. | |
Columbus is Europe's major contribution to the science endeavours on the International Space Station (ISS). | Columbus is Europe's major contribution to the science endeavours on the International Space Station (ISS). |
The 13-tonne, $1.3bn euro ($1.8bn; £0.9bn) module will carry out studies that would be impossible in the gravity experienced at the Earth's surface. | |
The laboratory will be delivered and installed by a joint US-European crew on Atlantis. | |
February is also the current scheduled launch month for Europe's other major ISS venture - the Automated Transfer Vehicle. The 20-tonne space truck will haul supplies to the orbiting outpost on a regular basis, and will become the station's main re-supply vehicle once the shuttle is retired. | |
The ATV will also have the task of re-boosting the ISS, which has a tendency to drift back to Earth as it drags through the top of the atmosphere. |
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