|
From U.S. News & World Report:
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- More than two weeks after Discovery's blastoff battered the launch pad, NASA is close to nailing down its repair strategy and insists the damage can be mended in time for the next space shuttle flight.
NASA plans to send Atlantis to the launch pad at the end of August, for an early October liftoff to the Hubble Space Telescope.
NASA allowed journalists to see the damage for themselves Monday, two days after Discovery's safe return to Earth. About 5,300 of the special heat-resistant bricks broke off a wall of the flame trench during Discovery's liftoff on May 31. Some of the foot-long bricks were hurled more than 1,800 feet.
Most of the bricks were still scattered over the ground Monday, many of them in fragments, resembling the aftermath of a volcanic eruption. Traces of asbestos in the bricks and the adhesive have stalled cleanup efforts.
Read the whole article
|