US, Russia Pledge to Keep Space Station Operating
Washington, Feb. 4 2003 (VOA News) -- The United States
and Russia have pledged to keep the International
Space Station operating, despite the moratorium on
U.S. shuttle flights following the Columbia disaster.
One
of the original arguments in favor of U.S. space shuttles
in the 1960s and 1970s was to use them to service
a space station. But it was not until the mid-1990s,
nearly a decade-and-a-half after the first shuttle
flight, that shuttles actually fulfilled that vision.
They began visiting the Russian station Mir, and have
been the mainstay for the construction of the current
international outpost.
But
now that the remaining three U.S. shuttles are grounded
after Columbia's loss, questions remain about how
the station will be serviced, restaffed, and maintained.
The NASA official overseeing the shuttle and station
programs is Michael Kostelnik.
"You
can trust that we are behind the scenes looking very
hard, to start thinking about, if and when we get
things ready to go, we will go back to fly in a timely
fashion to support the international space station,"
he said.
Mr.
Kostelnik says the near term is not a problem. Thanks
to a previously scheduled Russian cargo launch on
Sunday, the two U.S. astronauts and one Russian cosmonaut
aboard will have supplies until late June. They were
supposed to exchange places with a new crew during
a shuttle visit in March, but the NASA official says
they will now stay longer.
"The
international space station is pretty solid right
now," he said. "Obviously, there are going
to be some demands on the crew, because we're going
to have to extend their time in orbit."
In
fact, NASA officials say the station crew has offered
to remain aloft as long as necessary, while the Columbia
investigation proceeds. But the space agency prefers
not to keep astronauts in weightlessness for more
than six months because of its weakening effects on
bones and muscles.
If
the shuttle flight moratorium is lengthy, an obvious
way to exchange the space station crew would be on
Russian Soyuz spacecraft, which have been used to
ferry crews and Russian-sponsored space tourists to
the station. One is always attached to the outpost
as an emergency escape vehicle.
But
NASA international affairs spokeswoman Debra Rahn
says, no decisions have been made yet on crew exchange
or any other operational issues.
"That's
something we need to look at. We just don't have any
answers yet," she said. "I mean, the accident
just took place on Saturday. The program will have
to have discussions internally with our partners to
see where we go from here."
Planned
Russian space visits to the station this year include
two more by supply rockets and two by cosmonaut crews
on Soyuz craft to swap escape vehicles. The official
Itar-Tass news agency quotes a member of Kazakhstan's
Aerospace Committee, Meirbek Moldabekov, as saying,
the number of Russian takeoffs from the Kazakhstan
launch site might even increase to accommodate station
needs.
The
Russian contribution might be sufficient to keep the
outpost supplied and staffed, but NASA's Michael Kostelnik
says that, only shuttles can advance station construction,
meaning that building is on hold until further notice.
"The
space shuttle becomes the primary assembly support,
because it is the only heavy lift vehicle that can
take these large structures up to space, and it is
the only vehicle we have to bring things down from
space, both of which - up mass and down mass - are
required to do this," he said.
NASA
cannot predict when shuttles might return to flight
and continue station assembly. After the 1986 explosion
of the shuttle Challenger, the agency grounded the
fleet for two years and eight months, while it incorporated
safety redesigns into the remaining orbiters. The
top NASA official for space flight, Bill Readdy, says
the latest moratorium could be lengthy, while the
cause of Columbia's calamity is sought.
"Let
me assure you, we're going to take however long it
takes to get to the bottom of it, to identify the
root cause, and fix it, and then get back to flying,"
he said. "So whether it takes three months or
three years, so be it."
Columbia
was scheduled to make one flight to the space station
before next February, which was when NASA had hoped
to complete the core outpost, before other nations'
laboratory modules are added. Mr. Readdy says that,
despite the orbiter's loss, the remaining three shuttles
are sufficient to meet station needs.
--
David McAlary
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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