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Astronauts examine shuttle wings
Discovery's astronauts used lasers and
digital cameras Wednesday to examine the shuttle's wings for any signs of
launch damage as they gained on the international
space station with every circling of Earth.
The inspection is standard procedure, but it's an even higher priority
this time because of questions about possible flaws
in three wing panels.
Flight director Rick LaBrode said a preliminary look at the images
revealed nothing of significance, but it will take
another few days before experts on the ground finish
analyzing everything.
Commander Pamela Melroy and her crew used a 100-foot boom to survey
Discovery's wings and nose, which are exposed to as
much as 3,000 degrees during re-entry. The
inspection took a little longer than usual because
NASA wanted to collect more detailed pictures of the wings, in particular the
three suspect panels.
Before Tuesday's launch, a NASA safety group recommended that the flight
be delayed because there may be some cracking
beneath the coating on these three panels. But
senior managers decided to proceed, saying it was an
acceptable risk.
NASA wants to make sure none of the protective coating has chipped away
and nothing else is wrong with the reinforced-carbon
panels, before bringing Discovery home.
Columbia
was destroyed during re-entry 4 1/2 years ago
because of a hole in the left wing, left there by
flyaway fuel-tank foam.
Just as important will be the hundreds of digital pictures snapped by the
three space station residents as Discovery makes its
final approach for Thursday morning's docking. The
shuttle will do a slow-motion backflip, exposing its
belly.
Discovery is delivering a new room for the space station that's about the
size of a school bus. It's the first live-in
addition since 2001.
The pressurized compartment, called Harmony, will serve as the docking
port for
Europe and
Japan's
laboratories, which will be launched on the next
three shuttle flights.
Onboard preparations for the docking and the first spacewalk of the
mission, set for Friday, were interrupted by
repeated computer and cable problems.
"We seem to have had more than our fair share of bad cables," Melroy
said, sighing, as she struggled to get a continuous
stream of readings from one of the shuttle's fuel
cells.
Once Discovery arrives at the space station, the seven astronauts will
have little if any time to deal with problems.
They're facing the most challenging construction
work ever attempted in a single mission: installing
Harmony, moving a massive girder and set of solar
wings on the station, and pulling out those solar
wings and radiators. Four spacewalks are planned to
accomplish all this, and a fifth will demonstrate a
repair method for shuttle thermal tiles . |