Minor Damage Found On Space Shuttle
The BBC is reporting on minor damage to the space shuttle Atlantis revealed by a 10-hour inspection in orbit. On the shuttle's right side, near where the wing joins the body, inspection revealed a 21" (53cm) line of chips in the tiles that make up the vehicle's heat shield. "...more analysis by engineers would determine whether a 'focused inspection' was needed in that specific area. If so, astronauts would use sensors to determine the exact depth of the damage to the heat shield tiles. NASA has placed the space shuttle Endeavour on stand-by to rescue the crew of Atlantis if they are endangered." The crew couldn't shelter on the ISS in case of trouble, because their orbit is higher and on a different inclination.
.. if they launch Endeavour to rescue Atlantis, and Endeavour suffers damage at launch?
Can someone speculate the feasibility of "dropping" to meet ISS?
I mean, does NASA have equipments/knowledge/training to do such maneuver?
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So in case of any real damage, Endeavor blasts off (piloted by a 2 Astronaut crew?), all the Astronauts on board Atlantis pack their bags and take a seat in the other shutlle and live happily ever after, which is most important of all. But what would happen to Atlantis in that case? You obviously can't tow it or land it by remote, but leaving such a large object in a (decaying) orbit could cause a lot of trouble. So what would they do? Send it to the moon à la "Space Cowboys" or give it a gentle but controlled kick, letting it crash and burn up in the atmosphere?
Is this really a new development that the Shuttle gets increasingly fragile or is it just the fact that since Columbia it gets checked extra carefully and therefore revealing what before just went unnoticed?
Maybe NASA could build a capsule small enough to put into the shuttle through the side hatch. One crew member initiates re-entry then rides out aero braking inside the capsule. If the spacecraft burns up the capsule falls into the air. Parachutes open automatically.
As far as I know the pilot is only needed to manually deploy landing gear. Everything else can be automatic or remotely operated.
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