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NASA's Shuttle Atlantis Leaves Space Station For Last Time

MARCIA DUNN   07/19/11 05:32 PM ET   AP

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last space shuttle is headed home.

Atlantis left the International Space Station on Tuesday and slipped away after a partial lap around the station. Ten pairs of eyes pressed against the windows, four in the shuttle and six in the station.

All that remains of NASA's final shuttle voyage is the touchdown, targeted for the pre-dawn hours of Thursday back home in Florida. Its return ends the 30-year run of a vessel that kept U.S. astronauts flying to and from orbit longer than any other rocketship

"Get her home safely and enjoy the last couple days in space shuttle Atlantis," the station's Mission Control told commander Christopher Ferguson and his crew.

Replied Ferguson: "It's been an incredible ride."

As a final salute, the space station rotated to provide never-before-seen views of the complex. Atlantis flew halfway around the outpost, cameras whirring aboard both craft to record the historic event.

Flight controllers savored the dual TV images. "It must look pretty spectacular," Ferguson said.

And it did: Atlantis sailing serenely against the black void of space, its payload bay wide open, and the space station, its huge solar wings glowing golden in the sunlight.

As the lead team of flight controllers signed off for the very last time, the voice emanating from the shuttle's Mission Control cracked with emotion. Another team would take over late Tuesday for landing.

To ensure their safe return, the crew conducted one final survey of the shuttle, using the robotic arm and a laser-tipped extension. Experts scrutinized the images for signs of micrometeorite damage.

Atlantis spent 8 1/2 days at the space station and left behind a year's worth of supplies, insurance in the event commercial providers encounter delays in launching their own cargo ships.

It was the 37th shuttle mission, over more than 12 years, dedicated to building and maintaining the space station – the largest structure ever to orbit the planet.

In keeping with tradition, Atlantis' departure was marked by the ringing of the naval ship's bell aboard the space station. The undocking occurred nearly 250 miles above the Pacific.

"Atlantis departing the International Space Station for the last time," space station astronaut Ronald Garan Jr. announced, ringing the bell three times. "We'll miss you guys. Godspeed."

Ferguson thanked the six station residents for their hospitality, then added:

"We'll never forget the role the space shuttle played in its creation. Like a proud parent, we anticipate great things to follow ... Farewell, ISS. Make us proud."

All told, shuttles spent 276 days – or nearly 40 weeks – docked to the station. It's now a sprawling complex with multiple science labs – 13 rooms in all and more than 900,000 pounds of mass, most of that delivered by shuttles.

"So large that some astronauts have even momentarily gotten lost in it – you can take it from me," said Mission Control communicator Daniel Tani, a former station resident. "Of course, the ISS wouldn't be here without the space shuttle so ... we wanted to say thank you and farewell to the magnificent machines that delivered, assembled and staffed our world-class laboratory in space."

NASA and its international partners mean to keep it running until at least 2020. With the retirement of the shuttle fleet, the space station now must rely solely on other countries for restocking, at least until the first privately funded rocket blasts off with a load. That could come by year's end.

Private astronaut launches from U.S. soil, however, are three to five years away – at best. Until then, Americans will continue flying to and from the space station via Russian Soyuz capsules at a hefty price.

The Atlantis crew left behind a small U.S. flag that flew on the inaugural shuttle voyage in 1981. The flag is the prize for the first company that launches astronauts to the station from the U.S. President Barack Obama described it last week as "a capture-the-flag moment here for commercial spaceflight."

Obama wants private companies taking over Earth-to-orbit operations so NASA can concentrate on sending astronauts beyond. The goals: an asteroid by 2025 and Mars by the mid-2030s.

Flight director Kwatsi Alibaruho alluded to the potential difficulties ahead, as he described how he's dealt with his own discomforts regarding the end of the shuttle program and the uncertain future for space exploration.

"I try to look at that as an adventure, rather than focusing too much on the memories," he said Tuesday.

Atlantis will join Discovery and Endeavour in retirement after this 13-day journey, the 135th for the shuttle program. All three will become museum displays.

Tuesday marked the 36th anniversary of the undocking of the Apollo spacecraft from a Soviet Soyuz in the first-of-its-kind joint flight. Nearly six years passed between the end of that 1975 mission and the start of NASA's next: the space shuttle.

Mission Control said that gap – five years and nine months – is the mark to beat this time around. And it said it was starting the clock.

___

Online:

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

Shuttle-station sightings: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/sightings/index.html

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last space shuttle is headed home. Atlantis left the International Space Station on Tuesday and slipped away after a partial lap around the station. Ten pairs of eyes...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last space shuttle is headed home. Atlantis left the International Space Station on Tuesday and slipped away after a partial lap around the station. Ten pairs of eyes...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dave Bee
A robot in disguise
09:57 PM on 07/19/2011
I almost hope we get attacked by aliens or one just shows up and threatens us or something, because at this rate its the only way our species will ever travel the stars.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CHARLESTHETENTH
06:31 PM on 07/19/2011
Farewell Space and Good Riddance. A travel journey to nowhere at the expense of Billions. A side trip to the unknown that cost the taxpayers dearly. Squandering money and resources that would have been better utilized here at home and not some Star Trek venture. It may have created jobs but these were very highly paid jobs which for every one could have funded two jobs in our own home grown economy. Wasteful spending is only part of this big picture...just like the Missile Silos built at the cost of Billions and now laying dormant, so too the Space launching pads, the hangers, the Shuttles and all the other hardware. They will remain memories in History of the great Space program which was America's folly.
07:08 PM on 07/19/2011
50 years of NASA is about what it cost for 2 years of the military. Also, there were a lot of benefits. http://www.nasa.gov/50th/50th_magazine/benefits.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ralph Perman
Unapologetic Progressive Liberal
05:29 PM on 07/19/2011
Really kind of Sad! They did their job admirably.

Now on to the Next Ship, and hopefully Asteroids or even Mars, in a few years, maybe a decade!
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Carbon 60
Science can take us to the stars
05:01 PM on 07/19/2011
We learned many critical things for space travel with our experience that the shuttle program gave us. Just like the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo programs. I am very sad that this great era of space travel known as the space shuttle program. But now its time to take our new found knowledge and explore other celestial bodies of the inner solar system. I would love to see an asteroid walk, or even a mission to Mars.
04:53 PM on 07/19/2011
Check that heat shield before coming back.
04:46 PM on 07/19/2011
Wait... The Russians have the same type of shuttle... WTF??
05:21 PM on 07/19/2011
Well, they did have the Buran Shuttle, which flew once successfully, unmanned, and then a few years ago the roof of the hangar they kept it in collapsed due to snow and crushed the vehicle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
portabello
Some of my best friends are Truffles
04:45 PM on 07/19/2011
I'm sure China will be more than happy to take it from here.
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ProudToBeVeryLiberal
Science is the antidote to the poison of religion
04:42 PM on 07/19/2011
Please people, stop blaming the end of the Shuttle program on Bush or Obama, as if it were a bad thing. After the completion of the ISS, the obsolete and hyper-expensive Shuttle simply no longer had any reason to exist. By 2015, we should have a replacement bus to and from the ISS (yeah, I know, it was delayed from the original 2014...) Fortunately there's good competition and some good ideas, although I'm not sure the best one will be selected. You know, that thing called politics... Remember though that the Bush administration wanted to end and de-orbit the ISS by 2016, while President Obama agreed to extend it at least through 2020.
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loco48
TRUTH trumps ideology!
05:29 PM on 07/19/2011
One of the many things I did not understand about bush is he said one time we should send man to mars. When the first bunch of mars rovers were sucessfully landed, I watched many photos the rovers took. Why send a man back to the moon when robots are much cheaper and do not require life support?
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ProudToBeVeryLiberal
Science is the antidote to the poison of religion
05:47 PM on 07/19/2011
Well, as they say, "it's not the destination, it's the journey." What I mean is that sending humans to Mars wouldn't accomplish anything that robots can't do (and the MER missions proved they can do a sterling job), but it would present challenges that will result in further development of manned space flight. Not to mention there would be a technological windfall on your daily life. Just think of all the things you use every day that were originally developed for the space program: computers, composite materials, advanced alloys, advanced medical technology, cellphones, GPS etc.
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Elk Hunter 1
Organic=Profit
06:10 PM on 07/19/2011
Tell that to the few thousand of people who lost their jobs because of this program ending.

They should keep it going until there is a replacement. Now we have to us the Russians to get our boys to the space station. It's sad. If they even had a new program started to replace the shuttle it wouldn't be that bad, but we don't. They are still trying to "pick" a replacement. Meanwhile lots of good paying jobs are just gone.
07:30 PM on 07/19/2011
Sad to say, the people who worked in any capacity with the Shuttle Program knew. From the time Bush announced in 2004 the end of the program most were advised that their jobs would more than likely end in 2010. There has been 'phasing' out parts of the program since 2005 or so, which is about 6 years.
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PalaceOfWisdom
Obama signed away habeus corpus
04:34 PM on 07/19/2011
"Obama wants private companies taking over Earth-to-orbit operations so NASA can concentrate on sending astronauts beyond. The goals: an asteroid by 2025 and Mars by the mid-2030s."

Is there any Bush policy he won't continue? At one point in time Mars could have supported life. There, I just saved us billions of dollars.
04:21 PM on 07/19/2011
As I read this, I have tears of joy as well as sorrow. The United States has accomplished so much in our exploration of Space, that I hate to see the program end. I can only imagine what new and better places NASA has in mind for us, and continue to look forward to the day we will return. There is still much to see and learn out there! As one song says "The sky's not the limit, 'cause there's footprints on the moon." Bring home lots of beautiful memories, be proud of yourselves and best wishes on a safe flight home to our amazing astronauts!
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Boffer Bings
The world is not a scene.
03:46 PM on 07/19/2011
An incredible vehicle, yes, but this is over 30-year-old technology. The whole "we have to beg Russians" talk doesn't make sense to me, either; it smacks of American Exceptionalism to the nth degree. You don't beg them, you pay them. Until you construct something more commercially viable and capable of more than the space shuttles. Big deal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rich Phitzwell
03:43 PM on 07/19/2011
Well at least the station can be lifted to its planned orbit now. Still shocks me we have used the shuttle to deliver supplies while modules have been left on earth forever.
04:02 PM on 07/19/2011
The station was boosted to its utilization orbit by the European ATV earlier this year. They had to really watch the payload weight on STS-135 because of the higher orbital velocity, even with the bare-bones crew of four.

To my knowledge there are no finished modules sitting around on Earth. There's the engineering test article for Node 1 that could be refitted as Node 4 with some work and might be launched in the future using an expendable rocket. Bigelow is under contract to produce an inflatable module to be delivered to the ISS for testing purposes in the same way.

Other than that, originally planned modules like the Centrifuge Accommodations Module (CAM) and the habitation module were never actually funded and built. The station design was changed to use Node 3 (Tranquility) as the primarily habitation module rather than as a node per se.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rich Phitzwell
06:31 PM on 07/19/2011
The cam was partially built and is on display at jaxa. As for the height, I believe last I looked which was a few years ago, they have been planning on raising it even further after the shuttle retired, but as of now its pretty much maxed out for the shuttle. I could be wrong.
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ProudToBeVeryLiberal
Science is the antidote to the poison of religion
04:48 PM on 07/19/2011
There are no modules left on earth. Six were cancelled (three American, three Russian) at various stages of development, most of them never actually went past the design phase.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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babybuda
Tolling for the outcast....
03:23 PM on 07/19/2011
May the four winds blow you safely home or at least the solar wind and gravity and your thrusters... godspeed !
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Rudderman
Warren for Senate.
03:15 PM on 07/19/2011
So cool.
The ISS has a genuine brass ships bell on board which was rung with the Atlantis undocking.
Very classy and in the best of age-old nautical traditions.
Sail home safely, Atlantis.
03:08 PM on 07/19/2011
Money will be better spent on helping working class, public employees, elderly, teachers, union workers, undocumented citizens and military families.