NASA canceled a spacewalk Wednesday as it scrambled to deal with two power problems at the international space station.
The spacewalk set for Thursday was supposed to deal with a
malfunctioning rotary joint for the solar wings on the right side of
the space station. Instead, the astronauts were informed that their
next spacewalk would be Friday — at the earliest — and involve work
with the station's ripped solar wing.
Both issues are competing for the precious little spacewalking time
that's left in Discovery's mission, which already was extended a day
after the joint problem cropped up last weekend. The problems could
delay future missions and make it even harder to finish building the
orbiting outpost before the space shuttles must be retired.
Five spacewalks had been scheduled for Discovery's space station
construction mission, the most ever attempted for a mission like this.
In the 26-year history of space shuttle flight, five spacewalks have
been performed only on Hubble Space Telescope repair missions.
At a news conference earlier Wednesday, shuttle commander Pamela
Melroy said that her crew is ready to tackle whatever repairs are
ordered — even if that means extending the mission again and adding
another spacewalk.
"I think we're kind of in the groove right now, so if the ground
decides that's the right thing to do and they ask us to do it, we'll be
ready to support it," Melroy said.
Until they were informed of the switch in plans, astronauts Scott
Parazynski and Douglas Wheelock were getting ready to spend the
mission's fourth spacewalk Thursday thoroughly inspecting a
malfunctioning rotary joint that keeps the station's solar panels
turned toward the sun. A fifth spacewalk had been scheduled for
Saturday for additional space station construction work, and will
likely have to be put off as well.
NASA generally needs at least one day in between spacewalks to allow
the astronauts to rest and get the space station prepared for the
outings.
The solar wing damage occurred as it was being unfurled Tuesday. The
tear forced NASA to halt the process before the wing was full extended.
Until at least one of the problems is resolved, the station won't be
able to generate enough power to support new equipment, such as a
European lab that is supposed to be delivered by Atlantis in December.
Delaying that mission would set back other deliveries, including the
planned February installation of a new Japanese lab.
NASA is up against a hard 2010 deadline for completing the space station and retiring the three remaining shuttles.
The solar panel ripped just after Parazynski and Wheelock finished a
seven-hour spacewalk to install the beam that holds the wings.
Deploying the damaged wing's twin went off without a hitch.
Astronauts took hundreds of pictures of the wing tear, but NASA
engineers couldn't tell what caused the damage, space station flight
director Heather Rarick said late Tuesday.
"Until we know what we think the cause is, maybe until we get some
better pictures, I don't think we really have any solid leads on how to
fix it yet," Rarick said.
Astronaut Daniel Tani said he noticed a second, smaller tear near
the 2 1/2-foot rip while he was taking additional pictures Wednesday.
NASA also wasn't sure about the cause of the rotary joint problem.
Steel shavings were found during a spacewalk over the weekend in the
joint on the right side of the station. Until NASA figures out what's
grinding inside the gears and fixes it, the right joint will remain in
a parked position as much as possible, limiting power collection.
Discovery currently is scheduled to undock from the station on Monday and land on Wednesday.(ap)
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