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| A picture publicized by NASA
showing a large piece of foam insulation broke off from the shuttle
Discovery's fuel tank during its liftoff on
Tuesday. |
LOS ANGELES, July 27 (Xinhuanet) -- NASA said on
Wednesday evening it will suspend future space shuttle flights because foam
debris that brought down Columbia is still an unsolved problem.
Shuttle managers made this decision after a large
piece of foam insulation broke off from the shuttle Discovery's fuel tank during
its liftoff on Tuesday.
"We won't be able to fly again" until the problem is
solved, said shuttle program manager Bill Parsons at a briefing in Houston space
center.
Although NASA shuttle managers did not think the foam
had hit Discovery, they admitted to have underestimated the insulation problem.
Before the Discovery launch Tuesday morning, NASA
believed the safety of its shuttle fleet had been improved.
"Clearly, with the event we had, we were wrong," said
Parsons, "Until it is closed we will not fly again. Might as well let that out
now. Until we are ready we will not fly again."
Engineers said the foam might be 50 to 60 centimeters
long, 20 to 30 centimeters wide, and just a few centimeters thick, very similar
to the chunk that hit Columbia's left wing during liftoff in January 2003.
Meanwhile, the Discovery crew are observing the
shuttle external tank, wings, and nose with digital cameras and laser scans, to
determine whether the shuttle had been hit by the foam insulation, a NASA
shuttle status report said.
The crew also photographed the Orbital Maneuvering
System pod tile areas and sent back images. Most of the heat shield survey,
taking a close look at the reinforced carbon-carbon of Discovery's wings and
nose was sent down live, NASA said. Enditem
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