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HongYen 10.08.2005 15:57:41 (permalink)
AP - Tue Aug 9, 4:11 PM ET

The Space Shuttle Discovery is towed along the tarmac to it's Mate-Demate Device (MDD) after a successful landing at Edwards Air Force Base in Calif., on Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2005. The MDD is a large gantry-like structure where the orbiters receive post-flight servicing and are prepared for the ferry flights back to the Kennedy Space Center with the NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA). (AP Photo/Chris Carlson) Email Photo Print Photo

[image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/4A404A3415784237BC68B7C766141A3F.jpg[/image]
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#76
    HongYen 10.08.2005 16:00:04 (permalink)
    Shuttle's Future Unclear After Landing

    By ALICIA CHANG, Associated Press Writer
    2 minutes ago



    EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - Safely back on Earth, though not quite home. Now the shuttle faces an uncertain future.

    Signaling its arrival with two thunderous sonic booms, Discovery hurtled out of a black desert sky to a smooth touchdown Tuesday after scrapping four landing attempts at its Florida base because of rain and lightning. The landing at a backup site was met with cheers and palpable relief after a tense two-week mission that raised fears of a Columbia-like disaster.

    "Congratulations on a truly spectacular test flight," Mission Control said after Discovery came to a stop on the concrete runway at 5:11 a.m. PDT. "Welcome home, friends."

    The mission exposed how vulnerable the shuttle fleet remains, despite a tremendous amount of money and effort invested in the first U.S. manned space mission in the 2 1/2 years since the Columbia tragedy.

    Shortly after liftoff July 26, a 1-pound chunk of foam insulation fell from the fuel tank — the very thing that doomed Columbia — but it missed Discovery. Still, NASA grounded all shuttle flights until engineers fix the problem.

    "We're going to try as hard as we can to get back in space this year," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said at a post-landing news conference. "But we're not going to go until we're ready to go."

    Shuttle managers freely acknowledged the foam mistake, while stressing that the inspection, photography and other shuttle data-gathering systems put in place for this flight worked well. What's more, NASA officials said no severe damage was detected on Discovery while it was in orbit.

    "I hope this shows people that we're coming back," NASA spaceflight chief Bill Readdy said from Cape Canaveral, Fla. "We've got some more work to do. We know what we need to do and we'll do it."

    The Columbia disaster weighed heavily on everyone's minds as the shuttle made its descent to Earth. Co-pilot James Kelly said he was "honestly hoping that we'd make it farther than they did. And I wished that they had made it all the way home."

    Unlike previous Edwards landings, in which throngs of spectators gathered for a shuttle return, the public was barred from viewing Discovery due to increased security after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

    The 17,000-mph plunge from orbit took Discovery through a passage of the same kind of intense heating that exposed the mortal wound in Columbia's wing. The shuttle soared across the Pacific and over Southern California, passing just north of Los Angeles on its way to Edwards as it completed a journey that spanned 5.8 million miles and 219 orbits of Earth.

    NASA adjusted the flight path in order to skirt Los Angeles because of new safety considerations in the wake of the Columbia disaster, which rained debris onto Texas and Louisiana.

    During Discovery's approach, Dr. Jon Clark, a NASA neurologist and husband of Columbia astronaut Laurel Clark, said he quietly remembered his wife and closely compared the two missions.

    "I thought, 'This is when the tire light went on,'" Clark said from Kennedy Space Center, referring to an initial sensor reading that Columbia was breaking up. "I was paralleling the two missions."

    Two hours after touchdown, the astronauts walked around the shuttle to inspect for possible damages.

    "It looks fantastic," Commander Eileen Collins said.

    Collins said the United States should continue launching shuttles until the scheduled completion of the international space station in 2010 — a sentiment echoed by NASA Administrator Michael Griffin.

    "Some people say we should stop flying the shuttle because we had an accident — frankly we've had two accidents — but we are people who believe in this mission and we are going to continue it," Collins said.

    .....

    http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050810/ap_on_sc/space_shuttle
    #77
      HongYen 10.08.2005 16:03:47 (permalink)
      AFP/NASA-HO - Tue Aug 9, 6:27 PM ET

      Discovery, seen here, roared safely back to Earth after a tense first shuttle flight since the 2003 Columbia disaster and its crew pleaded for support for future space travel(AFP/NASA-HO)

      [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/16101BB0B8A648F8A9EA096C4DBED3E6.jpg[/image]
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      #78
        HongYen 10.08.2005 16:09:36 (permalink)
        Reuters - Tue Aug 9, 4:44 PM ET
        Space shuttle Discovery crew members, pilot James Kelly and Soichi Noguchi (R) of Japan, attend a news conference August 9, 2005 after Discovery landed safely at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The space shuttle Discovery and its seven astronauts returned to Earth safely on Tuesday, successfully completing NASA's troubled resumption of human space flight 2 1/2 years after the Columbia disaster. REUTERS/Sam Mircovich Email Photo Print Photo

        [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/029E58D8DD2948DEA11BBD2C901D20C7.jpg[/image]
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        #79
          HongYen 10.08.2005 16:22:46 (permalink)


          http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/tm.aspx?m=50979&mpage=3


          >>>>>>>>>>>>
          AP - Tue Aug 9, 4:34 PM ET

          Space Shuttle Discovery astronaut Steve Robinson talks about his experience repairing the foam tiles of the space shuttle during a news conference at Edwards Air Force Base in Calif. Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2005. Looking are shuttle crew members, from left to right, Commander Eileen Collins, pilot Jim Kelly, Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi, Robinson, and Charles Camarda. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

          [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/387FCF05866342CA8EB6644B470AF073.jpg[/image]
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          #80
            HongYen 10.08.2005 16:27:52 (permalink)
            Reuters - Tue Aug 9, 4:17 PM ET

            Discovery shuttle commander Eileen Collins looks down the table at her crew during a news conference August 9, 2005 after Discovery landed safely at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Discovery and its seven astronauts returned to Earth safely on Tuesday, successfully completing NASA's troubled resumption of human space flight 2 1/2 years after the Columbia disaster. REUTERS/Sam Mircovich

            [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/95A763F72CEC4F138D2B7F8797EA031B.jpg[/image]
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            #81
              HongYen 10.08.2005 16:35:32 (permalink)
              AFP/NASA/File - Tue Aug 9,11:37 AM ET

              Astronaut Soichi Noguchi, mission specialist representing Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), uses a communication system at the International Space Station. The Japanese home town of Noguchi erupted with joy as the Discovery landed.(AFP/NASA/File)

              [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/14A1E4EC0421485CB807C993FA03EA16.jpg[/image]
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              #82
                HongYen 10.08.2005 16:39:10 (permalink)
                Tue Aug 9,11:37 AM ET

                Japanese home town of astronaut erupts with joy on shuttle's return

                CHIGASAKI, Japan (AFP) - The Japanese home town of Discovery astronaut Soichi Noguchi erupted with joy and pride as the man who has become a national hero returned safely to Earth on the US space shuttle.

                About 400 people in this small seaside town south of Tokyo voiced relief as they watched NASA images on a giant screen at a gym in Hamasuka junior high school, which Noguchi attended.

                Tears filled the eyes of Tadashi Makabe, 54, a physical education teacher who was assigned to Noguchi's class some 25 years ago, as he watched Discovery appear in the dark pre-dawn California sky and touch down.

                "Congratulations!" he said, as he wept in joy and held his fists above his head with emotion.

                "It has taken so long to see this landing. This is unbelievable. I don't even like flying in airplanes. This is wonderful," he said.

                Noguchi's former classmate from junior high, Megumi Ito, 40, said she was so proud of Noguchi that she could not believe what was happening before her eyes.

                "I am relieved that he is back and safe," she said.

                "Soichi did it. I want to tell him, congratulations. I don't know what to say," she said, firmly holding a towel in the gym in the summer heat.

                Local residents came to the gym waving small banners reading, "Congratulations astronaut Noguchi for realizing your dream."

                Local boy scouts also held signs for Noguchi, himself a former scout, reading: "Welcome back leader Noguchi. Thank you for giving us a dream."

                "Mr. Noguchi, welcome back and congratulations," said Nobuaki Hattori, the city's mayor. "We were absolutely encouraged by your work."

                Noguchi, the sixth Japanese in space, has become a national celebrity with the media reporting daily on his activities.

                On Thursday he spoke from space for 12 minutes with Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and Japanese schoolchildren.

                http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20050809/lf_afp/usspaceshuttlereax_050809153722
                #83
                  HongYen 10.08.2005 18:24:29 (permalink)
                  The astronauts' families

                  ......

                  By ALICIA CHANG, Associated Press Writer
                  9 minutes ago

                  President Bush congratulated the Discovery team.

                  "It was a great achievement," Bush said. "It was an important step for NASA as it regains the confidence of the American people and begins to transition to the new mission we've set out for NASA."

                  NASA said it will be a week before Discovery leaves California, riding piggyback atop a modified Boeing 747 back to Cape Canaveral. The cross-country trip is expected to cost the space agency about $1 million.

                  Of the 111 shuttles that have landed since 1981, 49 came in at Edwards. The last shuttle to land at Edwards was Endeavor in 2002.

                  Discovery's crew accomplished its main objectives to resupply the international space station and fix broken equipment. The first shuttle to visit the space station since 2002, Discovery spent nine days docked to the orbiting lab.

                  Astronauts performed two planned spacewalks to test new repair techniques and replace a failed 660-pound, washing machine-sized gyroscope which helped control the station's orientation. It is the first time in three years that all station's gyroscopes were working simultaneously.

                  In a third unprecedented spacewalk, astronaut Stephen Robinson went beneath Discovery's belly to pull out two protruding thermal tile fillers that engineers on the ground feared could cause overheating during re-entry and lead to another Columbia-type disaster. NASA canceled a fourth spacewalk to repair a torn thermal blanket near the cockpit window, saying that it posed little danger to the shuttle.

                  Collins said she could not see the torn blanket from orbit, but a ground inspection revealed that it was not significantly damaged.

                  The switch to landing in California was a big disappointment for the astronauts' families, who had been waiting two weeks to greet their loved ones in Florida. Astronauts planned to reunite with their families on Wednesday, when they all plan to meet in Houston.

                  In Rochester, N.Y., Collins' 79-year-old father, James, a retired postal worker, described it as "the day of my life."

                  "We're always the parents of Eileen," he said. "Eileen right now to me belongs to all of us. Right at this point, I can say she belongs to the world."

                  ___

                  Associated Press Writer John Antczak contributed to this report.

                  ___

                  On the Net:

                  NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/returntoflight/main/index.html


                  http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050810/ap_on_sc/space_shuttle
                  #84
                    HongYen 10.08.2005 23:07:00 (permalink)
                    Reuters - Tue Aug 9, 3:40 PM ET

                    The crew of the space shuttle Discovery (L-R) Charlie Camarda, Wendy Lawrence, Steve Robinson, Commander Eileen Collins, Andy Thomas of Australia, Soichi Noguchi of Japan and Pilot James Kelly stand on the tarmac after their successful landing at Edwards Air Force base in California August 9, 2005. Discovery and its seven astronauts returned to Earth safely on Tuesday, bringing a successful end to NASA's troubled return to human spaceflight 2 1/2 years after the destruction of sister ship Columbia. Photo by Nasa Tv/Reuters Email Photo Print Photo

                    [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/B106F08B55B04A6E8AD90AAB989C15A8.jpg[/image]
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                    #85
                      HongYen 10.08.2005 23:14:28 (permalink)
                      Reuters - Tue Aug 9, 2:58 PM ET

                      LeRoy Cain, the ascent/descent flight director for STS114, (R) answers questions from the media after the successful landing of the space shuttle Discovery during the post-landing briefing at the Johnson Space Center in Houston August 9, 2005. Discovery and its seven astronauts returned to Earth safely on Tuesday, successfully completing NASA's troubled resumption of human space flight 2 1/2 years after the Columbia disaster. REUTERS/Tim Johnson

                      [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/CB353D5FDA2F4EDE9C6FA17A39A3E1B8.jpg[/image]
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                      #86
                        HongYen 11.08.2005 16:03:13 (permalink)
                        Foam is biggest obstacle to next shuttle flight

                        By Traci Watson, USA TODAY
                        Wed Aug 10, 8:12 AM ET


                        NASA engineers and managers were joyous at space shuttle Discovery's safe return Tuesday, but they realize it could be a long time before the shuttle flies again.

                        "I feel fantastic," shuttle program manager William Parsons said. Nevertheless, he said, "we have some things we learned and that we've got to go work on."


                        The main obstacle to the next flight is the foam insulation on the shuttle's fuel tank. Discovery's tank lost five chunks of foam, though none damaged the vehicle. The seven crewmembers on shuttle Columbia died during re-entry after foam fatally damaged the ship.


                        NASA halted all future shuttle flights because of the persistent foam troubles. Parsons conceded it's not known when the foam problem will be fixed.


                        NASA Administrator Michael Griffin suggested the shuttle program will never return to the time when there were five to six flights a year before the Columbia accident.


                        "We need to reset the paradigm here on shuttle flights," he said. "Shuttle flights cannot be conducted in accordance to a schedule."


                        Griffin plans to retire the aging shuttles in five years. A long delay in returning to space could threaten plans to finish the International Space Station, which is made of parts only the shuttle can carry to orbit. A delay could also doom the ailing Hubble Space Telescope, which needs maintenance by visiting astronauts to keep going.


                        More immediately, NASA faces the challenge of getting the next mission off the ground. Shuttle Atlantis, scheduled to launch Sept. 22-25, won't fly until Discovery is refurbished so it is able to rescue the Atlantis crew from space if necessary. Discovery's touchdown in California, rather than at its base here, complicates those preparations.


                        It will take a week to prepare Discovery for its journey home, said Stephanie Stilson, the vehicle manager in charge of Discovery. The trip itself might take more than a week if the shuttle has to wait out bad weather.


                        In Florida, technicians will need to check Discovery's heat shield, load the vehicle with fuel and perform other tasks. Stilson said whatever is necessary, such as requiring overnight shifts for technicians, will be done to make sure Discovery doesn't prevent Atlantis from launching. The next launch window is Nov. 7-10.


                        Worries about the future took a back seat for Columbia crew relatives, who wanted to see the first landing since their family members died. Dorothy and Paul Brown, parents of Columbia astronaut David Brown, took their first commercial plane flight in 15 years to pay tribute to their son and his crewmates.


                        "This is the (shuttle's) return to flight, and we wanted to endorse it," David Brown's mother said. "That's what our son David would've wanted."

                        http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20050810/tc_usatoday/foamisbiggestobstacletonextshuttleflight
                        #87
                          HongYen 11.08.2005 16:08:24 (permalink)
                          Reuters - Wed Aug 10, 7:30 PM ET
                          Discovery astronaut Steve Robinson talks with spacesuit clad fan Bailey Schneider, 4, of the Woodlands, Texas, during a crew return celebration at Ellington Air Force base in Houston August 10, 2005. The space shuttle Discovery and its seven astronauts glided safely back to Earth on Tuesday, successfully completing NASA's troubled return to human space flight 2 1/2 years after the Columbia disaster that killed all the astronauts on board. REUTERS/Tim Johnson


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                          #88
                            HongYen 11.08.2005 16:12:45 (permalink)
                            Reuters - Wed Aug 10, 7:11 PM ET
                            Discovery astronaut Soichi Noguchi of Japan speaks to the media at the crew return celebration at Ellington Air Force base in Houston August 10, 2005. The space shuttle Discovery and its seven astronauts glided safely back to Earth on Tuesday, successfully completing NASA's troubled return to human space flight 2 1/2 years after the Columbia disaster that killed all the astronauts on board. REUTERS/Tim Johnson Email Photo Print Photo

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                            #89
                              HongYen 11.08.2005 16:17:04 (permalink)
                              Reuters - Wed Aug 10, 6:36 PM ET
                              NASA Administrator Michael Griffin (L) stands with Discovery Astronauts (2nd L-R) commander Eileen Collins, pilot James Kelly, Soichi Noguchi of Japan, Steve Robinson, Andy Thomas of Australia, Wendy Lawrence and Charlie Camarda are greeted during a crew return celebration at Ellington Air Force base in Houston August 10, 2005. Shuttle Discovery appears to have suffered very little damage on its latest mission, though a detailed analysis is yet to be completed, a NASA spokeswoman said on Wednesday. REUTERS/Richard Carson


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                              #90
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