NASA resets launch date
Shuttle Endeavour set to lift off for space station Wednesday
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA will try to launch space shuttle Endeavour again Wednesday, after repairing a hydrogen gas leak that thwarted the first attempt.
Top officials decided Monday to bump an unmanned moon mission so Endeavour could have another shot at flying to the International Space Station. The delayed moon mission is NASA’s first in a decade and is critical to the space agency’s long-term effort to return humans to the lunar surface.
The Atlas V rocket had been scheduled to blast off Wednesday with a pair of lunar probes – a moon-mapping orbiter and a craft meant to crash into a shadowed crater at the moon’s south pole. That launch is now scheduled for no earlier than Thursday; it would slip to Friday if the shuttle countdown proceeds trouble-free into early Wednesday.
“If you’ve spent any time on the Space Coast and monitoring launches, you notice that they tend to attract each other, and we’ve got that very situation here,” said Chuck Dovale, launch director for the moon mission.
NASA ended up having to choose between the two missions because Endeavour could not launch this past Saturday. The potentially dangerous hydrogen gas leak in the vent line leading to the shuttle’s external fuel tank halted the countdown.
Technicians finished the repairs Monday, replacing the vent line hookup and a pair of seals.
The launch is scheduled for 5:40 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Forecasters put the odds of good weather at 80 percent.
Endeavour and its crew of seven must be flying by this weekend, otherwise it will have to wait until mid-July. That’s because of unfavorable sun angles that would heat the shuttle too much while it is docked to the space station.