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NASA Space Shuttle Discovery Launch: PHOTOS Of The Final Flight

AP/HUFFINGTON POST     First Posted: 02/24/11 05:32 PM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Discovery, the world's most traveled spaceship, thundered into orbit for the final time Thursday, heading toward the International Space Station on a journey that marks the beginning of the end of the shuttle era.

The six astronauts on board, all experienced space fliers, were thrilled to be on their way after a delay of nearly four months for fuel tank repairs. But it puts Discovery on the cusp of retirement when it returns in 11 days and eventually heads to a museum.

Discovery is the oldest of NASA's three surviving space shuttles and the first to be decommissioned this year. Two missions remain, first by Atlantis and then Endeavour, to end the 30-year program.

Launch director Mike Leinbach anticipated it would be "tough" to see Discovery take off for the 39th and final time, and even harder when it returns March 7.

"It's a very, very personal thing that we love to do," Leinbach explained. "It's a lot more than just our livelihood. It gets in our soul."

Space Shuttle
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The contrail of the Space shuttle Discovery hangs over Pad 39A after liftoff at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011. Discovery, the world's most traveled spaceship, thundered into orbit for the final time Thursday, heading toward the International Space Station with a crew of six on a journey that marks the beginning of the end of the shuttle era. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Emotions ran high as Discovery rocketed off its seaside pad into a late afternoon clear blue sky, and arced out over the Atlantic on its farewell flight. There were a tense few minutes before liftoff when an Air Force computer problem popped up. The issue was resolved and Discovery took off about three minutes late, with just a few seconds left.

"The venerable veteran of America's human spaceflight fleet," as the launch commentator called it earlier in the day, will reach the space station Saturday, delivering a small chamber full of supplies and an experimental humanoid robot. The orbiting lab was soaring over the South Pacific when Discovery blasted off under the command of retired Air Force Col. Steven Lindsey.

NASA is under presidential direction to retire the shuttle fleet this summer, let private companies take over trips to orbit and focus on getting astronauts to asteroids and Mars.

An estimated 40,000 guests gathered at Kennedy Space Center to witness history in the making, including a small delegation from Congress and Florida's new Gov. Rick Scott. Discovery frenzy took over not only the launch site, but neighboring towns.

Roads leading to the launching site were jammed with cars parked two and three deep; recreational vehicles snagged prime viewing spots along the Banana River well before dawn. Businesses and governments joined in, their signs offering words of encouragement. "The heavens await Discovery," a Cocoa Beach church proclaimed. Groceries stocked up on extra red, white and blue cakes with shuttle pictures. Stores ran out of camera batteries.

The launch team also got into the act. A competition was held to craft the departing salutation from Launch Control; Kennedy's public affairs office normally comes up with the parting line. Souvenir photos of Discovery were set aside for controllers in the firing room. Many posed for group shots.

Lindsey and his crew paused to take in the significance of it all, before boarding Discovery. They embraced in a group hug at the base of the launch pad.

Unlike the first try back in November, no hydrogen gas leaked during Thursday's fueling.

NASA also was confident no cracks would develop in the external fuel tank; nothing serious was spotted during the final checks at the pad. Both problems cropped up during the initial countdown in early November, and the repairs took almost four months. The cracks in the midsection of the tank, which holds instruments but no fuel, could have been dangerous.

The lengthy postponement kept one of the original crew from flying.

Astronaut Timothy Kopra, the lead spacewalker, was hurt when he wrecked his bicycle last month. Experienced spacewalker Stephen Bowen stepped in and became the first astronaut to fly back-to-back shuttle missions.

Packed aboard Discovery is Robonaut 2, or R2, set to become the first humanoid robot in space. The experimental machine - looking human from the waist up - will remain boxed until after Discovery departs. Its twin was at the launch site, perched atop a rover, waving goodbye.

Discovery already has 143 million miles to its credit, beginning with its first flight in 1984. By the time this mission ends, the shuttle will have tacked on another 4.5 million miles. And it will have spent 363 days in space and circled Earth 5,800 times.

No other spacecraft has been launched so many times.

Discovery's list of achievements include delivering the Hubble Space Telescope to orbit, carrying the first Russian cosmonaut to launch on a U.S. spaceship, performing the first rendezvous with the Russian space station Mir with the first female shuttle pilot in the cockpit, returning Mercury astronaut John Glenn to orbit, and bringing shuttle flights back to life after the Challenger and Columbia accidents.

Discovery is expected to be eventually put on display by the Smithsonian Institution.

___

Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Discovery, the world's most traveled spaceship, thundered into orbit for the final time Thursday, heading toward the International Space Station on a journey that marks the beg...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Discovery, the world's most traveled spaceship, thundered into orbit for the final time Thursday, heading toward the International Space Station on a journey that marks the beg...
 
 
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derspado
There is no future without knowing the past.
04:35 PM on 02/26/2011
I wonder how smart and happy everyone would feel about killing our spaceprogram when this entire planet can be wiped out in an instant. Just like America. Be the first and most ambitious. Be the best and the brightest. Reach the goals we set. Then "profressively" lower them and lower them until we forget why we went and accomplished what we did in the first place.

Focus on the future and life off this planet should be the key. But we would rather whine about whos taxes are going up, whos privacy is being invaded, what the kardashians are doing.
10:17 AM on 02/25/2011
To infinity and beyoooond! :)
06:35 AM on 02/25/2011
This is been such a huge part of our culture and national story. I wonder what we'll do without it. We'll miss the beautiful pictures, that's for sure.
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FerrisValyn
02:56 PM on 02/25/2011
We'll get more beautiful pictures, thanks to vehicles like the Dragon & CST-100 & Dreamchaser
05:33 AM on 02/25/2011
But the Eagle has landed; tell your children when.
Time won't drive us down to dust again.
05:30 AM on 02/25/2011
Go starship go!
Being an European, one of my regrets for life will be that I never had the chance to go to White Sands to see the liftoff with my naked eyes.
I will remember forever the January, 28 1986.
02:38 AM on 02/25/2011
instead of decommissioning all 3 shuttles we should leave one of them with the space station
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02:59 AM on 02/25/2011
why
09:31 AM on 02/25/2011
perhaps as an emergency escape vehicle
03:16 PM on 02/25/2011
Doesn't work. The Shuttles use cryogenic reactants for electrical power, and they only last for a maximum of 17 days. They can get some of their power demand from the ISS while docked, but only if the fuel cells are also running. Without power, the life support systems stop working.

Perhaps a larger problem is that Shuttle's radiators face the forward velocity vector when docked to the ISS, and the odds of an MMOD strike puncturing the freon tubing are very high. In fact, this contingency has already happened once while docked to the ISS for a short duration.

Normally, the ISS orbits with PMA2 on the Harmony Node facing forward, but when the Shuttle is docked, the ISS rotates 180 degrees to protect the fragile silica tiles on the underside. This places the aft end of a Soyuz or Progress spacecraft toward the velocity vector, which is not ideal.

So in practice, if Shuttle were to be docked to the ISS permanently as an orbiting museum piece (probably with no power and sealed off from the rest of the station with closed hatches), it would be flown belly first into the velocity vector, with its silica tiles cratered like a golf ball over time. It wouldn't be much of a museum piece in that condition.

Finally, keeping the Shuttle in its design docking location blocks the Node 2 nadir Common Berthing Mechanism, which is the primary docking port for cargo spacecraft including the Japanese HTV and the American SpaceX Dragon.

In fact, the HTV currently at the ISS had to be robotically relocated to Node 2 zenith in order to make room for Discovery to arrive (Discovery was supposed to fly in November and was not supposed to interfere with the HTV). This docking port does not yet have the right electrical interfaces, which are ironically being delivered by Discovery, requiring the ISS crew to jury-rig an improvised jumper cable from spare parts in order to support the Shuttle mission.
11:27 AM on 02/27/2011
Wow! Do you work at Nasa? Great detail!
02:37 AM on 02/25/2011
Researcher Reports Progress
Building Antimatter Trap
Then disappears into alternate universe.
01:11 AM on 02/25/2011
Discovery is the oldest of NASA's three surviving space shuttles and the first to be decommissioned this year. Discovery represents the advanced astronautical technology of America all over the world.

www.forumswindows8.com
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MikeyJaii
Socialism.
12:31 AM on 02/25/2011
We should be putting more funds into these kind of programs.
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10:22 PM on 02/24/2011
Now can we move on from the 1970's space tech?
Shuttle should have been canceled and replaced 20 years ago.
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Imzadi
Proud Progressive for decades
08:26 AM on 02/25/2011
Replaced with what is the question.
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FerrisValyn
09:14 AM on 02/25/2011
Its being replaced by CST-100, by Dragon, by the Dreamchaser, Prometheus

And they will fly on the Atlas V, the Delta IV, and the Falcon 9
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12:47 PM on 02/25/2011
robots should be the answer.
man in space just slows the science down.
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Waterlooboy
Alba gu Bràth
10:18 PM on 02/24/2011
I once talked to a manager at JPL who told me that the shuttle really has not contributed that much to science. And the costs are staggering. Robotics and unmanned flight,on the other hand, has opened up the solar system and the universe beyond. That said, there is still something about people exploring space that stirs the imagination. I think it is our ultimate destiny. It may take another 200 years or more, but I think we'll populated the solar system.
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10:24 PM on 02/24/2011
No we won't.
That's just Star Trek.
Robots will explore the solar system.
We have to figure out how to sustain human life on this planet because there is nowhere else to go.
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FerrisValyn
01:03 AM on 02/25/2011
yes, there is - there is lots of places to go in the solar system.

I agree, robots may explore the solar system, but humans will settle it
03:01 AM on 02/26/2011
@Waterlooboy -- A prime example of this being those "non-contributions" to science via the servicing missions by the shuttle and its human crews to the Hubble Space Telescope...
10:07 PM on 02/24/2011
We know more about the freakin surface of stinkin mars than we do of our own ocean, wtf?
No seriously, the environmental destruction we create, and the solutions that need to be monetarily solved are use to go to see another planet to discover life after we waste the earth? B-tards...
Anyway, what's in the background of Picture two? A UFO?
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10:26 PM on 02/24/2011
or a bird.
They try to tell them about the launches but they won't listen.
10:45 PM on 02/24/2011
Sorry, I think I understand what you are saying, but not exactly...
I don't think a bird that far way would appear so big, in proportion to the rocket, and no bird is that fearless...
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09:58 PM on 02/24/2011
Fir those that missed it, USA once led in the "Space Race, we were ALL so proud of that Moon landing, and the world was proud of USA Now we are behind most of world in space and China has HUGE space program underway. Seems corp/LLC took over nation and unless it is cost plus and shares sold, fees collected, why bother with Science or even something as useless a PBS. Never has a nation that led world in so many areas fallen in all of them as has USA.
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10:26 PM on 02/24/2011
poppycock
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10:44 PM on 02/24/2011
Simply minds and simple replys
02:41 AM on 02/25/2011
unfortunately he/she is right ......... I am disgusted with the situation as well
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Perdendosi
05:01 PM on 02/25/2011
"Never has a nation that led world in so many areas fallen in all of them as has USA."

Really? How about
Greece (to the extent it was a nation), ~400 BCE
The Roman Empire ~ 400 CE
Spain ~ 1600
Britain ~ 1800

The latter two were just about imperialism and power, but there have been many civilizations that have contributed much to governance, philosophy, technology, commerce, health, and the arts that have, for one reason or another, fallen. It's inevitable that the US would slip; the question is how much and how far.
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09:50 PM on 02/25/2011
Not oddly you missed part where several had governments and money that built huge sports arena's to get the commoners mind off reality, as well as ALL of them turned from manufacturing inside nation to massive imports. But some of Rome and possibly Greek issue was the amount of lead in their cooking materials, here in USA is a amount of money in their campaign funds. But when you compare the R'/Tea Klan with some of the past "Fathers of Democracy etc, it was Aristotle that replied when asked "Hey Arty how come you are for free men but own slaves?" And as any good political would say, (Speaker note he did not cry, Obama/D's note he did NOT 'Compromise". ole Arty said about his owning slaves "I consider them a personal embarrassment", Seems level of hypocrisy has not changed much in the "freedoms of man" area!
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Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
09:51 PM on 02/24/2011
Really glad to see this in the Tech section. There is SO much cool stuff out there other than telephones and social media.PLEASE more "other tech".
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10:26 PM on 02/24/2011
don't you mean science?
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Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
10:07 AM on 02/25/2011
Yes. I was unaware that science and technology had gone their separate ways.
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Jeff Larkin
07:57 PM on 02/24/2011
Obama used nasa to help get votes here in Fl. promising hopes and dreams. Nowthat he's the MAN he shut it down and gives us the cold shoulder. Nasa is cheap compared to the money we throw away daily on a global scale. Wonder what Kennedy and Reagan would be thinking right about now.
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FerrisValyn
09:46 PM on 02/24/2011
Sorry, thats crap

Obama isn't shutting NASA down - he is doing the reforms necessary to make it viable and deliver real value in the 21st century
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10:00 PM on 02/24/2011
Ype just like health care and mortgages and Credit Cards and giving MS Warren Dir job in new agency. just one more lil ole "Obama helping the commoners"/ Wonder if he will be guest or honored speaker at R national convention in 2011
11:36 AM on 02/27/2011
Continuous Improvement gets you places. There has to be more efficient spacecraft that can accomplish the same goals. That's what he's proposing. If you stick to the same "if it ain't broke don't fix" mantra...you'll wake up and wonder how China, Italy, Russia, etc. all have more effective and efficient programs than we do. Just ask GM who thought trucks would last an eternity while other car manufacturers were focused on continuous improvement. It's the 21st Century...out with the old in with the new!