CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, June 13, 2009

Saturday Shuttle Launch Scrapped

Hydrogen Leak Leads To Postponement Until Wednesday At Earliest

  •  (AP)

(AP)  A potentially dangerous hydrogen gas leak cropped up during the fueling of space shuttle Endeavour on Saturday and forced NASA to postpone the launch by at least four days.

It was almost identical to a leak that stalled another flight back in March and threatened to bump Endeavour's space station construction mission all the way into July.

NASA halted the countdown shortly after midnight, less than seven hours before Endeavour was due to blast off. The seven astronauts had yet to suit up.

Launch director Mike Leinbach said the leak, located at a vent line hookup on the fuel tank, was significant. Hydrogen gas is extremely volatile and can burn in large enough quantities, he noted.

"There's no way we could have continued," Leinbach said at a hastily called news conference. "It's a commodity you just don't mess with."

The hydrogen gas leak is similar to one that NASA faced while trying to launch Discovery three months ago. That flight was delayed four days because of the problem and shortened as well. Atlantis, however, encountered no such trouble during its countdown in May for the Hubble Space Telescope repair mission.

NASA's launch team immediately began draining Endeavour's external fuel tank while trying to figure out what went wrong. In March, the leak occurred where a vent line hooks up to the tank. The hookup was replaced along with a couple of seals and the seepage stopped, but engineers never did determine the exact source of the trouble.

Officials said workers wouldn't be able to get to the vent line on Endeavour's tank until Sunday.

NASA is up against a tight deadline. A four-day delay would make Endeavour's next launch attempt Wednesday. But that's the day the space agency is supposed to launch a moon-bound spacecraft aboard an unmanned rocket.

Mike Moses, chairman of the mission management team, said it was too soon to say which mission would take priority. "We haven't even begun to work that yet," he said.

In any event, if Endeavour isn't flying by next Saturday, it will have to wait until July 11 for the next launch attempt because of unfavorable sun angles that would make the shuttle too hot while docked at the international space station.

During the 16-day mission, Endeavour and its crew are supposed to deliver the final segment of Japan's huge space station lab, along with some spare parts for the orbiting outpost and more than 600 pounds (270 kilograms) of food for the six men living there.

When Endeavour pulls up, there will be 13 people together in orbit for the first time.

Of the seven shuttle astronauts, only one is a woman, a Canadian. The rest of the crew are U.S. citizens. On board the space station, the crew is more international. The six occupants, all men, represent Belgium, Canada, Japan and Russia, as well as the U.S.

Endeavour and its crew will spend 11½ days at the space station. Five spacewalks are planned.

If Endeavour flies this month, its arrival will come at a particularly busy time for the space station. The station crew doubled in size late last month; that's taken some adjustment for everyone involved. Then just a week ago, two of the crew went out on a spacewalk. Earlier this week, the two put their spacesuits back on and went into the air lock to work on a docking hatch.

NASA is pushing to launch Endeavour as soon as possible because of the demanding lineup of shuttle flights over the next 1½ years. The space agency is under presidential direction to retire its three remaining shuttles and complete the station by the end of 2010 if possible.

"It has a lot of downstream effects if we punt to July," Moses said. "Every launch delay pushes the next one back. It's not the end of the world, but it's not the simplest thing to do."

Eight shuttle missions remain, including Endeavour's upcoming trip. Each one is dedicated to finishing the station, currently 81 percent complete, and hauling up supplies, spare parts and experiments.

The space station will be supplied over the long haul by unmanned Russian, European and Japanese craft, but none as big as the shuttle. That's why NASA needs to deliver large spare parts now, while the shuttles are still flying.

Until NASA's new spaceship is ready to carry passengers - which isn't expected to happen before 2015 - U.S. astronauts will hitch rides back and forth on the cramped Russian Soyuz spacecraft for up to $51 million a person.

© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by ibzjem June 14, 2009 10:38 AM EDT
Posted by dartplayer501 at 9:51 AM : Jun 13, 2009

Thanks for the link. that's very helpful.
Reply to this comment
by aztecdakota June 14, 2009 10:20 AM EDT
About the people and STIMULUS CHECKS. The government issued $250.00 "stimulus checks" to people on Social Security, BIG JOKE, now in the year 2010, THEY HAVE TO PAY IT BACK, by the government absorbing their 2010 cost of living increase. So really, there was no "stimulus check", it was a loan, and the government is taking it back wether they like it or not. Besides that 250 bucks, was a joke.
Reply to this comment
by aztecdakota June 14, 2009 10:15 AM EDT
Go forth and prosper.
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by dartplayer501 June 13, 2009 12:51 PM EDT
OK, the budget for the space program is around $20 billion. Yes that could spent on health care etc. However, check out http://www.thespaceplace.com/nasa/spinoffs.html, a site that describes all the positive spinoffs from the program, aside from all the pure science aspects and tell me it's money poorly spent. Consider that the Pentagon budget is $711 billion. That's 5.8 times China's and 10.2 times Russia's, in fact 48% of all the defence spending in the world is the pentagons. You think maybe they could cut $20 billion from their budget to pay fror healthcare etc. and leave the space program intact?
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by mainermike June 13, 2009 11:19 AM EDT
AS I SEE IT, by Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.

I can't see why we need to send satellites to outer space to explore other planets, it's a waste!

They should only send to outer space when they really need to.

We've already got to much space junk orbiting Earth anyhow.
Reply to this comment
by ibzjem June 13, 2009 10:55 AM EDT
actually, if you view satellite TV, use GPS, or like to see the daily weather forecast, then you use what we get from space exploration. Pure and simple.....
Reply to this comment
by mainermike June 13, 2009 10:53 AM EDT
AS I SEE IT --- Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.

Actually, I don't think neither the war in Iraq or the Space program makes sense.

They both should be scrapped so every American can enjoy affordable health insurance.
Reply to this comment
by ibzjem June 13, 2009 10:51 AM EDT
It too bad people in general don't understand that scientific inquiry leads to so many things that we enjoy and benefit from on a daily basis. I guess they think that these things will just appear from thin air or come to someone in a dream or something. For instance, the advent of lasers came about from pure scientific study and now they help people in surgeries every day. I wonder if those who think the space program is a "waste of money" also think building roads and bridges is a waste of money too.
Reply to this comment
by mainermike June 13, 2009 10:27 AM EDT
AS I SEE IT, by Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.

If they'd just stop sending shuttles out into space, this country would be able to afford health insurance for all Americans.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out.
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by retiredgustav June 13, 2009 10:26 AM EDT
I put a lot of food on my family's table in the earlier days of the space program ( I helped build rocket motor casings for the Saturn 5 rocket). The space program makes a lot more sense than this STUPID WAR in the mid-east!
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by grabandgo June 13, 2009 10:21 AM EDT
Give every American over 50 a million dollars.
Make them retire, buyt a car and either buy a house or pay off their house.
A lot better than playing Buck Rogers and flying off into space.
Reply to this comment
by mainermike June 13, 2009 9:48 AM EDT
Welcome to AS I SEE IT, by Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.

With all the turmoil regarding our economy, it's incredible that our country is still launching space shuttles. Heck, even if the economy's great, it's not worth spending the money just to satisfy intellectual curiosity.

And millions of American agree, and have so for years.

With the amount of money it's taking to launch Endeavour, they should scrap this mission permanently, and save the money to help our government work it's way out of the debt it's in.

Or, for that matter, the government could give each taxpaying U.S. citizen another stimulus check.

That's AS I SEE IT. I'm Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.
Reply to this comment
by grabandgo June 13, 2009 9:24 AM EDT
Ka Ching Ka Ching......money being wasted.
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