Re: Environmental Damage Seen From Space Shuttle
- From: "spiritrising" <spiritrising@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 06 Aug 2005 12:08:09 GMT
maybe they should do something about all that propellent they spew into the
air, that would be a big help just by itself. spiritrising
"The_Unforgiven (The Subtle Troll)" <graaywolf@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1123308511.488938.140920@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> News Reuters
>
>
> Environmental Damage Seen From Shuttle
>
>
> Aug 4, 1:14 PM (ET)
>
> By Jeff Franks
>
> HOUSTON (Reuters) - Commander Eileen Collins said astronauts on shuttle
> Discovery had seen widespread environmental destruction on Earth and
> warned on Thursday that greater care was needed to protect natural
> resources.
>
> Her comments came as NASA pondered whether to send astronauts out on an
> extra spacewalk to repair additional heat-protection damage on the
> first shuttle mission since the 2003 Columbia disaster.
>
> Discovery is linked with the International Space Station and orbiting
> 220 miles above the Earth.
>
> "Sometimes you can see how there is erosion, and you can see how there
> is deforestation. It's very widespread in some parts of the world,"
> Collins said in a conversation from space with Japanese officials in
> Tokyo, including Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
>
> "We would like to see, from the astronauts' point of view, people take
> good care of the Earth and replace the resources that have been used,"
> said Collins, who was standing with Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi
> in front of a Japanese flag and holding a colorful fan.
>
> Collins, flying her fourth shuttle mission, said the view from space
> made clear that Earth's atmosphere must be protected, too.
>
> "The atmosphere almost looks like an eggshell on an egg, it's so very
> thin," she said. "We know that we don't have much air, we need to
> protect what we have."
>
> While Collins and Noguchi chatted, NASA officials were deciding whether
> a torn insulation blanket protecting part of the shuttle surface could
> rip off and strike a damaging blow to Discovery when it re-enters the
> atmosphere.
>
> They said it could require another spacewalk to fix, which would take
> place on Saturday if needed. A decision was expected on Thursday
> afternoon.
>
> Noguchi and astronaut Steve Robinson already have done three
> spacewalks, including a landmark walk on Wednesday to remove loose
> cloth strips protruding from Discovery's belly. NASA feared the strips
> could cause dangerous heat damage when the shuttle lands on Monday.
>
> COLUMBIA TRIBUTE
>
> The combined crew of Discovery and the space station, nine in all, paid
> tribute on Thursday to the Columbia crew and other astronauts who have
> died in space accidents. They took turns speaking while television
> shots from the shuttle showed it passing over a sunlit Earth, then into
> night.
>
> "Tragically, two years ago, we came once more to realize that we had
> let our guard down. We became lost in our hubris and learned once more
> the terrible price that must be paid for our failures," said mission
> specialist Charles Camarda. "In that accident, we not only lost seven
> colleagues, we lost seven friends."
>
> Columbia broke apart before landing on Feb. 1, 2003, and the seven
> astronauts on board died.
>
> Loose insulation foam from the fuel tank struck the wing heat shield at
> launch 16 days before, causing a hole that allowed superheated gases to
> penetrate and destroy the shuttle when it descended into the
> atmosphere.
>
> NASA spent 2 1/2 years and $1 billion on safety upgrades after
> Columbia, but videos showed loose tank foam at Discovery's launch last
> week. The agency suspended shuttle flights until the foam problem is
> fixed.
>
> A report in The New York Times suggested NASA was not as careful as it
> could have been about the foam issue.
>
> The Times said an internal NASA memo, written in December by a retired
> NASA engineer brought back to monitor the quality of the foam
> operation, complained that deficiencies remained in the way foam was
> being applied to the fuel tank and warned "there will continue to be a
> threat of critical debris generation."
>
> A spokesman at Johnson Space Center in Houston told Reuters he had not
> yet seen the Times report and could not comment.
>
> GraayWolf
>
.
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