Monday, October 11, 2010
© Copyright 2013
Gwinnett Daily Post
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla -- There's still the matter of money. But it looks increasingly likely that NASA will get an extra space shuttle flight.
President Barack Obama signed a NASA spending bill into law Monday, following last week's approval by Congress. The measure directs NASA to move forward with an additional shuttle flight to the International Space Station, before retiring the fleet.
Sally Ride, the first American woman in space who took part in a White-House ordered review of human spaceflight, said the extra flight represents ''an important extension'' for supporting the space station.
The orbiting lab is meant to operate until at least 2020, with U.S. astronauts hitching rides on Russian Soyuz capsules until private companies in America can pick up the slack.
During a telephone press conference Monday, Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., said the funding issue should be resolved once Congress returns next month to Washington in a lame duck session. The space agency expects a final decision no later than December.
Only two shuttle launches officially remain, with the next one coming up Nov. 1. The third, yet-to-be-formalized mission would take place next June. Atlantis already is being prepped in case it needs to rescue the crew of Endeavour, set to fly in February.
Only four astronauts -- instead of the usual six or seven -- are assigned to that rescue mission. The crew size will remain the same if NASA gets the third shuttle flight. NASA wants to limit the number of crew members who would need to take refuge at the space station in case Atlantis is damaged at liftoff and couldn't be flown back to Earth.
Those four shuttle astronauts would need to return on Soyuz spacecraft over the course of a year.
The NASA Engineering and Safety Center reported last month that the risks associated with an additional shuttle flight -- with no shuttle backup -- were in line with others accepted by the shuttle and station programs.
More like this story
- Space shuttle Atlantis lands for final time ( May 26, 2010 )
- Space shuttle Atlantis soars on final voyage ( May 14, 2010 )
- Space shuttle comes to 'final stop' after 30 years ( July 21, 2011 )
- Last shuttle leaves space station, due back Thursday ( July 19, 2011 )
- Space shuttle Discovery makes final takeoff ( April 17, 2012 )

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