Shuttle
Launch Off Until January
By
MARCIA DUNN
CAPE
CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) NASA on Sunday delayed the launch of space shuttle
Atlantis until January after a gauge in the fuel tank failed for the second time
in four days.
With
only a few days remaining in the launch window for the shuttle's mission to the
international space station, senior managers decided to stand down until next
month in hopes of better understanding the perplexing and persistent fuel gauge
problem.
"We're
determined to get to the bottom of this," said LeRoy Cain, chairman of the
mission management team.
Whether
Atlantis can fly as early as Jan. 2 "is all going to depend on what we find
out," he said.
The
trouble with the fuel gauge resurfaced just before sunrise Sunday, about an hour
after the launch team began filling Atlantis' big external tank for an afternoon
liftoff.
Shuttle
managers had said they would halt the countdown and call everything off if any
of the four hydrogen fuel gauges acted up. Three failed during Thursday's launch
attempt; no one knows why.
Launch
director Doug Lyons said Sunday's failure was similar to what happened before,
except only one gauge malfunctioned this time.
"We
would rather have launched today, obviously," Cain said. "This was going
to be in the very least a good tanking test for us, and that's what it's turned
out to be."
NASA
quickly established an engineering team to come up with ideas on how to pinpoint
and fix the problem, which has bedeviled NASA off and on for the past two years.
The engineers will report back to Cain and other managers on Tuesday.
Most
inspections and repairs could be carried out at the launch pad. If the shuttle
has to be returned to its hangar for more invasive work, there will be no hope
of launching in early January, Cain said.
NASA
had until Thursday to launch Atlantis with the European Space Agency's space station
laboratory, Columbus. After that, unfavorable sun angles and computer concerns
would make it impossible for the shuttle to fly to the international space station
until next month.
Despite
objections from some engineers, NASA tightened up its launch rules for Sunday's
attempt in hopes of getting Atlantis off the ground by the week's end.
Not
only did all four of Atlantis' fuel gauges have to work on Sunday until
now, only three good gauges were required a new instrumentation system
for monitoring these gauges also had to check out. NASA also shrank its launch
window from five minutes to a single minute for added safety.
The
troublesome gauges, called engine cutoff sensors, are part of a backup system
to prevent the shuttle's main engines from shutting down too late and running
without fuel, a potentially catastrophic situation. They have been a source of
sporadic trouble ever since flights resumed in 2005 following the Columbia tragedy.
Two
groups of NASA engineers recommended that the flight be postponed and the fuel
gauge system tested, to figure out what might be going on. But they did not oppose
a Sunday launch attempt when it came time for the final vote.
Shuttle
commander Stephen Frick was deeply involved with the decisions that were made,
officials said.
Frick
and his six crewmates planned to return to their home base in Houston later Sunday.
"We hope everyone gets some well-deserved rest and we will be back to try
again when the vehicle is ready to fly," the astronauts said in a prepared
statement.
It
was another disappointing delay for the European Space Agency, which has been
waiting for years for its $2 billion Columbus lab to fly. NASA space station design
problems in the 1980s and early 1990s slowed everything down, then Russian troubles
and, most recently, the 2003 Columbia tragedy stalled the project.
"Another
few weeks isn't going to make any difference," said Alan Thirkettle, the
European space station program manager. "We want to fly, but we want to fly
safe."
NASA
officials said they expect little ripple effect on space station construction.
Associated
Press writer Brian Skoloff contributed to this report.