Discovery Launch

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Discovery Launch

Postby Themosticles » Tue Jul 26, 2005 8:45 am

Was a success up to this point. Really cool stuff.
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Postby Langston » Tue Jul 26, 2005 8:47 am

By now it should be outside the atmosphere, right?

Everything went cool, I guess?
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Postby Themosticles » Tue Jul 26, 2005 9:19 am

Yea, as far as they know everything went well.
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Postby Narrock » Tue Jul 26, 2005 10:20 am

That launch gave me chills. Soooo awesome...
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Postby brinstar » Tue Jul 26, 2005 4:43 pm

SPACE IS FUCKING AWESOME
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Postby Langston » Tue Jul 26, 2005 5:55 pm

brinstar wrote:SPACE IS FUCKING AWESOME


It's really big, too.
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Postby Captain Insano » Tue Jul 26, 2005 6:01 pm

Langston wrote:
brinstar wrote:SPACE IS FUCKING AWESOME


It's really big, too.



and full of pirates hunting zombies.
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Postby Narrock » Tue Jul 26, 2005 6:12 pm

Image

Astronaut Stephen Robinson, from the scary delusional armpit city of Sacramento.
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Postby Phlegm » Tue Jul 26, 2005 6:22 pm

From CNN:



KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Florida (CNN) -- Discovery roared into the skies over Florida Tuesday morning as NASA returned to shuttle space flight for the first time since the 2003 Columbia disaster.

Under a blue sky, the spacecraft lifted off at 10:39 a.m. ET, as scheduled.

"Liftoff of space shuttle Discovery, beginning America's new journey to the moon, Mars and beyond," said George Diller, the voice of shuttle launch control.

The launch followed days of troubleshooting to fix a faulty fuel sensor in its external tank that led to cancellation of a planned launch on July 13.

But video of what appeared to be some kind of debris falling off Discovery during launch prompted questions that NASA officials said they couldn't immediately answer.

The NASA video showed the unidentified debris falling and not appearing to hit Discovery. Falling debris that struck the craft during liftoff was blamed for the eventual destruction of Columbia as it re-entered the atmosphere in February 2003.

Since then, NASA has taken steps to minimize the amount and size of debris falling off the shuttle's exterior tank during its ascent. But the space agency has said it's impossible to eliminate falling launch debris. NASA experts said they will analyze liftoff video frame by frame in the coming days.

In a departure from previous shuttle liftoffs, 107 ground and aircraft cameras scrutinized this one to observe possible damage to Discovery from falling debris.

By Sunday, the mission management team will have enough information from the cameras to know whether Discovery is in safe enough condition to return to Earth, a NASA spokesman said before the debris video was released.

In February 2003, Columbia was destroyed during re-entry. Investigators blamed debris hitting the spacecraft during liftoff for damage that led to the disaster. All seven Columbia crew members were killed.

During a post-launch news conference, top NASA officials praised the liftoff.

"It was a very, very clean countdown," shuttle launch director Michael Leinbach, who watched the liftoff from the space center's control room, told reporters. "The mood was just giddy. People were slapping each other on the back."

"My heart has been in my throat all morning," said deputy shuttle program manager Wayne Hale. "It's been a great day."

During its first eight minutes aloft, Discovery accelerated to more than 17,000 mph in its journey to rendezvous with the international space station, the outpost orbiting 250 miles above Earth.

It jettisoned its solid fuel rocket boosters and its external liquid fuel tank before settling into orbit.

Commander Eileen Collins described the ascent as smooth and the crew feeling great.

"I couldn't ask for a better flight," Collins said from space.

The countdown to launch appeared to go smoothly. NASA said there was no sign of the fuel sensor problem that prompted controllers to scrub the mission's first liftoff attempt.

The space agency said it had tightened the electrical grounding on the fuel gauge sensors and made other adjustments.

If the sensor trouble had resurfaced Tuesday, NASA officials said they were considering waiving safety rules and launching regardless, because of the re-wiring and the redundancy of the system's backup sensors.

About three hours before liftoff, Discovery's seven crew members were strapped into their seats.

Collins was the first to board, giving a confident wave to NASA cameras before entering the cockpit.

Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi displayed signs that said: "Get out of quarantine free" and "OUT TO LAUNCH."

"Take note of what you saw here today. The power and the majesty of the launch, of course, but also the competence and the professionalism, the sheer gall, the pluckiness, the grittiness of this team that pulled this program out of the depths of despair 2 1/2 years ago and made it fly," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin told a press conference following the launch.

Among the dignitaries at the space center who witnessed the launch were first lady Laura Bush and her brother-in-law, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.

President Bush watched the launch from his private dining room next to the Oval Office, according to a White House spokesman.

"Our space program is a source of great national pride, and this flight is an essential step toward our goal of continuing to lead the world in space science, human space flight and space exploration," Bush said in a statement.

About 10 miles from the launch pad, scores of people who had camped out overnight along the Banana River watched the liftoff. Parked vehicles jammed state Route 528.

"That's the best thing I've seen in forever," said Darrell Pearce, 34, of Nashville, Tennessee. "Yesterday was my birthday and so it was a hell of a birthday present."

"When I saw it I was like, 'I can't believe I was a part of this event,.'" said Tammy Smith, 23, of Morgan City, Louisiana. "I am just overwhelmed right now."

Discovery's crew is scheduled to test a battery of tools and techniques that NASA engineers developed after the loss of Columbia to inspect the spacecraft's heat-resistant exterior tiles for any damage that might occur during liftoff.

On Wednesday, the crew will survey the wings and nose cap using a new orbital boom sensor system -- a 50-foot robotic arm tipped with cameras and other instruments and mounted in the shuttle's payload bay.

Discovery's mission takes it to the space station on Thursday to deliver supplies and conduct repairs.

The mission is scheduled to last 12 days.
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Postby Gidan » Tue Jul 26, 2005 7:50 pm

Langston wrote:
brinstar wrote:SPACE IS FUCKING AWESOME


It's really big, too.


Thats why they call it space, theres lots of it :)
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Postby Tacks » Tue Jul 26, 2005 7:59 pm

By JEFF DONN, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 1 minute ago



CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - In uneasy reminders of the Columbia accident, a thermal tile apparently got chipped and other debris whirled around Discovery as it rumbled toward space Tuesday, but it wasn't clear if the shuttle's sensitive skin had been jeopardized.


A 1 1/2-inch-wide bit of tile captured on camera appeared to fly off the shuttle's belly, on the edge of a door that encloses the nose landing gear. It was not clear if the tile had been struck by anything. Pieces of tile, which protect the shuttle from searing heat on return to Earth, have been lost on past flights without preventing a safe homecoming.

"We're going frame-by-frame through the imagery," said John Shannon, a NASA operations manager.

Also, NASA video revealed what appeared to be a sizable piece of material — maybe a chunk of insulation — coming off the shuttle's external fuel tank two minutes into flight. It did not strike the orbiter that carries the seven astronauts, the NASA manager said. Other agency footage showed covers flying off Discovery's thrusters — something expected to happen.

NASA managers said they would take several days to make a full judgment of any damage to the shuttle and decide how to deal with it.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is seeing more of the impact of launch on the shuttle than ever before, thanks to its most elaborate array of cameras and other imaging in history. "I fully expected we would see things that we hadn't seen in the past," said Shannon.

NASA trained more than 110 cameras on Discovery as it rumbled toward orbit. That's roughly 30 more than during the last shuttle launch — Columbia's 2003 mission that killed all seven astronauts and grounded the fleet until now.

The new cameras are meant to provide better views of damage to the shuttle's exterior from falling insulation, ice created by supercold fuel, or other materials. "Along with cameras on the ground, and in and on the shuttle itself, this imaging system will provide an unprecedented look at shuttle liftoff and atmospheric flight," said Bob Page, who is supervising NASA's camera team.

NASA wants to avoid a repeat of the Columbia mission, when a slab of insulating foam gashed its wing as it hurtled toward orbit. Mission ground crew suspected the strike, but blurry images made it hard to judge damage, investigators said.

For this launch, cameras were posted at new sites to track Discovery's launch from three angles. NASA set up new high-definition digital video cameras that can load images into the computer at the Kennedy Space Center launch site within 15 minutes of liftoff.

A camera on Discovery's giant external fuel tank also gave an unprecedented look at the shuttle's whole ascent. The astronauts then took digital pictures as the jettisoned tank tumbled back toward Earth.

In an experiment, two weather planes with crew in pressurized suits — for flight above 50,000 feet — shadowed the shuttle 20 miles away and captured high-altitude digital images through a telescope.

"It's a real expensive video game trying to keep the shuttle ... in the field of view," said crewman Brian Barnett.

Almost 90 impact sensors on the shuttle's wings, as well as radar, were arrayed to back up the pictures taken during liftoff.

Spy satellites were to photograph the shuttle later in the mission. The crew of the international space station will take pictures of the shuttle tiles when the craft approaches later in the week.

About 100 analysts at Kennedy, Johnson and Marshall space centers have been assigned to study the shuttle pictures and help decide if it was seriously damaged by any debris.

While the high-definition video can be viewed quickly, analysts must wait about a day for the first delivery of film, which gives the sharpest pictures.

NASA did not expect to eliminate all debris from shuttle liftoffs, despite its safety improvements. If dangerous damage has occurred, the astronauts can take temporary refuge inside the space station, and another shuttle crew could be sent up on a rescue mission
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