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Ned Potter is the science correspondent for ABC's "World News with Charles Gibson." He has reported on such topics as space exploration, the human genome and climate change.

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Watching the Shuttle

August 10, 2007 12:40 PM

Sts118_from_iss_81007 This afternoon the Shuttle Endeavour closed in on the Space Station.  The the pictures were quite cool, and it's all on your computer.

NASA TV has a page HERE, from which you can watch live video of the mission (or anything else NASA broadcasts) in your choice of players. 

And NASA's Human Space Flight section shows where the shuttle and station are in orbit on a map HERE. An apology in advance on both of these: they can get overloaded when things are busy.   

The Mission Management Team reported yesterday that the launch was clean.  They count nine pieces of foam that came off the orange external tank, and say they believe three of them hit the orbiter, but they say they're not terribly concerned about them.   The astronauts are photographing the shuttle's wings and underside now as a matter of course.

The first foam hit was 24 seconds after launch, and bumped against Endeavour's rear body flap--the horizontal fin just beneath the three main engines.  The second, just under a minute into flight, did hit the shuttle's right wing, but does not appear to have done any harm either.  The last was nearly three minutes after launch, when the shuttle is high enough--and the air is thin enough--that a loose piece of debris doesn't get slowed by the air around it. 

All this may sound like rationalizing, but it's genuinely different from what happened in the case of Columbia in 2003--when the shuttle apparently flew its entire mission with a hole in the wing, while a few engineers fretted over the possibility of trouble, managers said there was nothing to worry about...and nobody had a way to look.

August 10, 2007 | Permalink | Share | User Comments (1)

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I was watching the shuttle liftoff Wednesday evening during the excellent "World News" coverage with Lisa Stark reporting and Charles Gibson anchoring. I found myself intently watching the launch, holding my breath, and saying a little prayer that nothing untoward would happen. I also experienced the same feelings that I've previously had when I watched my first spacecraft launch: anticipation, marvel, wonder, and excitement at the thrill of it all. I'm glad to see that no severe damages happened to the shuttle.

Posted by: chuck | Aug 10, 2007 1:41:09 PM

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