4 Astronauts Will Be on Emergency Standby, Ready to Rush to the Rescue of Next Shuttle

From: Bill (nnone_at_nnone.com)
Date: 03/19/05


Date: Sat, 19 Mar 2005 12:53:32 -0600

4 Astronauts Will Be on Emergency Standby

Four Astronauts Will Be on Emergency Standby, Ready to Rush to the
Rescue of Next Shuttle

By MARCIA DUNN
The Associated Press

Mar. 19, 2005 - What if the next space shuttle winds up in trouble,
too? What if, like Columbia, it's damaged at liftoff and the
astronauts are up in space with a maimed rocketship? Could they be
saved? When Discovery is launched in a few months, a four-man rescue
squad will be standing by.

It's a plan for the unthinkable.

"It's a place where we don't want to go. We're training for a mission
we never want to fly," says the team's commander, Air Force Col.
Steven Lindsey.

A rescue mission which might require the president's approval is
fraught with complexities:

A second launch would have to be done hastily without all the usual
tests, possibly putting the rescue shuttle Atlantis and its crew in
harm's way.

The astronauts on the first shuttle, Discovery, would hole up at the
international space station. Designed to house three people, it would
be crammed with nine. And everyone would hope the station's
often-broken oxygen generator would do its job.

Discovery would have to be pushed off by remote control into the ocean
to make room for Atlantis at the space station.

If all worked as planned, Atlantis would return to Earth holding an
unprecedented 11 people.

And even if NASA managed to pull off this nightmare scenario, it would
likely mean an end to the shuttle program five years before its time.

Never before in 44 years of human spaceflight has NASA gone to such
lengths to have a spaceship ready to rush to another's assistance.

At Kennedy Space Center, hundreds of employees are toiling 24/7 on
this possibility. Discovery can't lift off unless Atlantis is ready to
fly one month later. It is a self-imposed requirement for the next two
shuttle flights and goes beyond the list of recommendations from the
panel that investigated the Columbia accident.

And so it is that Atlantis and Lindsey's minuteman team stands poised.
If Discovery goes up in mid-May as planned, NASA says it could launch
Atlantis as quickly as mid-June, a month sooner than scheduled.

"I'm ready to do it and I figure probably in that one-month period, I
wouldn't go home anymore, probably sleep in my office," says Navy
Cmdr. Mark Kelly, Lindsey's co-pilot.

If seven friends were up in space and needed to get home, Kelly says,
"I'm willing to take a lot of risk to do that, and I understand that,
and it's not a decision I will have to make later. I've already made
that decision."

It is this cool steadfastness and unwavering ability to focus on the
ordinary mission a service call to the space station in mid-July as
well as a nightmarish one, that makes Lindsey, Kelly, Piers Sellers
and Air Force reservist Michael Fossum seem as though they've stepped
out of "The Right Stuff."

As it turns out, the four were not hand-picked because of their
larger-than-life flying skills or lightning-fast thinking.

They just happened to be next in line for launch.

All four are in their 40s with children. All but Sellers is an
engineer; he has a Ph.D. in biometeorology. All but Fossum have flown
before in space.

Lindsey and Kelly are former test pilots, and Kelly whose identical
twin brother, Scott, is also an astronaut flew combat in Operation
Desert Storm more than a decade ago.

The British-born Sellers joined the crew a half-year late, replacing
an astronaut who was yanked for undisclosed medical reasons.

As Lindsey sees it, the odds of Discovery being gouged by foam debris
from the fuel tank at liftoff and its seven astronauts being stranded
at the space station, are very low given all the improvements in the
two years since the Columbia tragedy.

"I'll tell you what, if we aren't absolutely as confident as we
possibly can be that we have fixed the tank, which is our primary
rationale to go forward, then we have no business in launching," he
said.

Lindsey has promised his wife and three children if he senses anything
unsafe for this mission or any other, "I'll walk, I won't fly."

Earlier this month during a simulation of Discovery's upcoming flight,
NASA's mission managers held a dry run of the debate that would take
place if Discovery were damaged on liftoff. In the make-believe
scenario, the shuttle was struck at launch presumably by breakaway
foam insulation just as Columbia was.

With the clock running, flight managers had to decide whether the
craft could make it home with patches or whether the astronauts needed
to move into the space station and await rescue. The managers opted
for patch work.

"Hopefully, the probability is so low that we are just covering
ourselves, belt and suspenders," the shuttle deputy program manager,
Wayne Hale, said during the simulation.

In real life, back in January 2003, no one knew that a chunk of foam
had punched a sizable hole in Columbia's left wing. NASA knew the foam
hit somewhere, but discounted the possibility of catastrophic damage
and, after being proved wrong, contended there was nothing they could
have done to save the crew even if they had known about the damage.

The Columbia accident investigators didn't buy that. An exhaustive
study found that contrary to NASA's initial claims, the space agency
could have launched another shuttle to rescue the seven astronauts who
ended up perishing on their way back to Earth.

If Atlantis is called upon for rescue, launch director Mike Leinbach
says he would use the same engineering and weather criteria he always
uses to get that shuttle off the pad. But from a personal perspective,
the countdown would be unlike anything before.

"It would just be another one of those, I don't want to say, empty
feeling like I had the day that Columbia didn't come home," Leinbach
says. "It's impossible to describe the emotional feeling that everyone
would have launching the rescue mission. But we would do it if so
told."

NASA's main concerns, for now, are getting Discovery ready for a
mid-May launch and Atlantis ready for a possible mid-June emergency
launch, and keeping the space station running without more major
breakdowns.

Being stuck at the space station and awaiting rescue would have its
own problems. One of Discovery's astronauts, Andrew Thomas, who lived
aboard Russia's space station Mir seven years ago, says it's the
psycho-social aspects that would concern him most.

"What would we do on a day-to-day basis?" Thomas asks. He points to
history for the answer. Successful missions in tough situations have
hinged on crew members constructively working on their own day-to-day
survival. "You just have to look at what Shackleton did," Thomas says.

In the classic survival tale, Sir Ernest Shackleton in 1915 guided his
crew of 27 back to safety after their ship became trapped in the ice
of Antarctica. To keep up morale, he staged concerts, holiday
celebrations and sports matches.

A piano keyboard is up on the space station, "and maybe one of us
could learn to play the piano while we're there," Thomas says with a
chuckle. "You remember that movie, 'Groundhog Day?' That's what the
Bill Murray character did when he was caught in sort of a supposed
never-ending cycle."

But then Thomas turns serious again: "It would be a stressful
situation."

He is convinced the astronauts could be saved, but the danger would be
the premature death of the shuttle program, which is to be phased out
in 2010.

"It would be hard for me to imagine that were there another major
failure like this that Congress would not look askance at the shuttle
program and say, 'Hey, we're done with it.'"



Relevant Pages

  • Earths ONLY Spaceship (American, Of Course) Shuttle Endeavour Blasts Off
    ... Shuttle Endeavour Blasts Off ... "Good luck and Godspeed, and we'll see you back here in 16 days," launch director Mike Leinbach radioed to the astronauts right before liftoff. ... Gorie and his crew face a daunting job once they reach the international space station late Wednesday night. ... The Canadian Space Agency supplied Dextre, the two-armed robot that was hitching a ride aboard Endeavour, while the Japanese Space Agency sent up the first part of its massive Kibo lab, a storage compartment for experiments, tools and spare parts. ...
    (alt.politics)
  • a chink a spic and two women joke
    ... If either astronauts or NASA specialists doubt about the return of the shuttle to Earth, scientists will have to take urgent measures to save the astronauts ... US space agency NASA confirmed that a piece of tile came off Discovery Shuttle as it blasted off in space yesterday. ... Another US shuttle, Atlantis, will probably rumble into space to rescue five of Discovery's seven crewmembers. ...
    (misc.fitness.weights)
  • Re: a chink a spic and two women joke
    ... >>shuttle to Earth, a grand operation to evacuate the crew of the shuttle ... >>rescue five of Discovery's seven crewmembers (the shuttle can house the ... >>maximum of seven astronauts). ...
    (misc.fitness.weights)
  • Re: a chink a spic and two women joke
    ... >>>shuttle to Earth, a grand operation to evacuate the crew of the shuttle ... >>>rescue five of Discovery's seven crewmembers (the shuttle can house the ... >>>maximum of seven astronauts). ...
    (misc.fitness.weights)
  • Earths Only Spaceship, American Of Course, Successfully Launches
    ... -- A patched-up Atlantis blasted off with seven astronauts Friday on the first space shuttle flight of 2007, putting NASA back on track after a run of bad luck and scandal that included a damaging hailstorm and a lurid love triangle. ... Its big orange fuel tank covered with white blotches where the foam insulation had been repaired, the spaceship rose from its seaside launch pad with a roar and climbed into a clear and still-brightly lit sky at 7:38 p.m. ... Atlantis' astronauts will deliver a new segment and a pair of solar panels to the orbiting outpost. ...
    (alt.politics)