NASA Reschedules Endeavour for June 17 Launch
NASA decided June 15 to postpone the launch of the Space Shuttle Endeavour
to June 17. The original launch date for Endeavour's mission to the
International Space Station was June 13, but a potentially dangerous hydrogen
gas leak led NASA to scrub the takeoff.
The new launch forces NASA to reschedule the launch of a different mission set
for June 17 to June 18, when an Atlas V rocket carrying the LRO (Lunar
Reconnaissance Orbiter) and LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing
Satellite) will launch.
Those plans, of course, are subject to weather conditions and the assumption
that NASA will fix the hydrogen gas leak that delayed Endeavour's launch June
13. Forecasters are predicting a 70 percent chance of favorable launch
conditions for Endeavour. If Endeavour doesn't launch before June 20, the
mission will be delayed until July 11 because the late June and early July sun
angle on the ISS would create heat-related difficulties for Endeavour.
The moon shot carrying the LRO and LCROSS is now also on a dicey deadline as it
must launch by June 20 or wait until late June.
"A lot of things have to go our way," said Mission Management Team
Chairman LeRoy Cain.
After calling off the launch, NASA began draining Endeavour's external fuel
tank to investigate the leak. A hydrogen gas leak also delayed the March launch
of Discovery by four days; NASA patched that leak at a vent line but still
hasn't determined the exact source of the leak.
Launch Director Mike Leinbach said the Endeavour gas leak made the risk of a
launch-pad explosion too high.
"There's no way we could have continued," Leinbach said at a June 13
news conference. "It's a commodity you just don't mess with."
Endeavour was scheduled to arrive at the ISS with a cargo bay full of work,
including the final permanent components of the Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency's Kibo laboratory complex, a "front porch" on the ISS for
space-exposed science experiments. To store and transport the experiments that
the exposed facility will accommodate, Endeavour is also carrying a storage
area similar to the logistics module on the Kibo laboratory, but not
pressurized.
"It's a real exciting mission. We are the last mission that is taking up
Japanese hardware on a space shuttle ... really big pieces of equipment that
we're going to go ahead and leave behind on the space station for
construction," Endeavour Commander Mark Polansky said in a preflight
interview.
