According to NASA officials, the launch of space shuttle
Atlantis will be launched no sooner than January 24 and a takeoff date of early
February is also considered.
John Shannon, deputy manager for the Space Shuttle Program,
said that the schedule depends on test results and modifications to a fuel
sensor system connector on the external fuel tank Atlantis will use for launch
on its STS-122 mission to the International Space Station.
Technicians at NASA's Kennedy
Space Center, Fla.,
will modify a replacement connector for the one that was removed. Metal pins
inside the connector will be soldered to the socket, Shannon
explained. The new connector is scheduled to be in place by Jan. 10.
Known as Engine Cut-Off (ECO) sensors, the instruments sit
on the bottom of Atlantis' 15-story external tank and serve as liquid hydrogen
fuel gauges that ensure a shuttle's three main engines shut down before their
hydrogen supply runs dry after liftoff.
"We're fairly confident that if the problem is where we
think it is, that this will solve that," Shannon
said.
Shannon also added that the connector is undergoing
intensive testing at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
Atlantis, which will carry the European space laboratory Columbus to the
International Space Station, had been set for takeoff December 6 but was
eventually delayed until January 10 after several scrapped launches blamed on
the failing fuel sensors.
Atlantis will carry the European-developed Columbus laboratory and attach it to the
International Space Station.
Columbus
is about 23 feet long and 15 feet wide, allowing it to hold 10
"racks" of experiments, each approximately the size of a phone booth.
Five NASA racks will be added to the laboratory once it is in orbit. Each rack
provides independent controls for power and cooling, as well as communication
links to earthbound controllers and researchers. These links will allow
scientists all over Europe to participate in
their own experiments in space from several user centers and, in some cases,
even from their own work locations.
The Columbus
laboratory's flexibility provides room for the researchers on the ground, aided
by the station's crew, to conduct thousands of experiments in life sciences,
materials sciences, fluid physics and other research in a weightless
environment not possible on Earth.
In addition, the station crew can conduct experiments
outside the module within the vacuum of space, thanks to four exterior mounting
platforms that can accommodate external payloads. With a clear view of Earth
and the vastness of space, external experiments can run the gamut from the
microscopic world of bacteria to the limitlessness of space. The first two
experiment packages will fly to the station on the shuttle with the module
Space shuttle Endeavour - which itself was scheduled to go
up in February and will now be postponed - will most likely have to be repaired
as well. The mission STS-123 on space shuttle Endeavour should deliver the
pressurized section of the Kibo (Hope) Japanese Experiment Logistics Module
(ELM-PS) on the twenty-fifth mission to the International Space Station.