Flight is one of the last in the shuttle program and will deliver storage room, spare parts to the international space station. – Reuters Photo

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla: NASA on Thursday delayed the launch of space shuttle Discovery on a mission to the International Station to Dec. 3 from Nov. 30 to allow more time for repairs and determine why the ship’s fuel tank cracked, officials said.

“We can’t make the 30th,” NASA spokesman Allard Beutel said.

The USspace agency postponed Discovery’s liftoff on a planned 11-day mission when a potentially dangerous hydrogen leak was detected while the spaceship was being fueled for liftoff on Nov. 5.

After the postponement, NASA also discovered a large crack in foam insulation covering the tank, which is a debris hazard for launch.

Foam falling from shuttle Columbia’s fuel tank and striking the ship during launch triggered an accident that killed seven astronauts in 2003. NASA redesigned the tanks afterward to minimize foam loss.

The accident eventually led to the decision to cancel the shuttle program, which is being shut down after two or three more flights to complete the space station, a $100 billion project of 16 nations that has been under construction 220 miles (354 km) above Earth since 1998.

The 20-inch crack in Discovery’s tank insulation proved to be just the start of the problem. Engineers later found four cracks in an underlying support structure.

Repairs to fix the hydrogen leak and the tank are under way. NASA managers decided, however, they needed more time to understand what triggered the tank cracks and make sure the shuttle is safe to fly.

In addition to fixing Discovery’s tank, engineers are analyzing the fuel tanks earmarked for a final shuttle flight in February, as well as a possible additional mission next summer aboard shuttle Atlantis.

The December launch opportunity is a short one. Other activities at the orbital outpost require that Discovery be off the launch pad by Dec. 6 or possibly Dec. 7.

After that, the next opportunity to fly may not come until late February, which is when NASA hoped to launch shuttle Endeavour on a mission to deliver the $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer particle detector to the station, completing US assembly. – Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

Peak of success
06 Oct, 2024

Peak of success

IT started with the ascent of Nanga Parbat in 2017 and ended with the summit of Tibet’s Shishapangma on Thursday....
Indian visitor
06 Oct, 2024

Indian visitor

AMONGST the host of foreign dignitaries expected to fly into Islamabad for the SCO Council of Heads of Government...
Violence once again
Updated 06 Oct, 2024

Violence once again

The warring sides must rein in their worst impulses and prioritise the nation’s well-being over short-term gains.
Controversial timing
Updated 05 Oct, 2024

Controversial timing

While the judgment undoes a past wrong, it risks being perceived as enabling a myopic political agenda.
ML-1’s prospects
05 Oct, 2024

ML-1’s prospects

ONE of the signature projects envisaged under the CPEC umbrella is the Mainline-1 railway scheme, which is yet to ...
No breathing space
05 Oct, 2024

No breathing space

THIS is the time of the year when city dwellers across Punjab start choking on toxic air. Soon the harmful air will...