Endeavour lifts off on two-week mission
February 8, 2010 5:27 a.m. EST
a href=”http://www.cnn.com/” target=”_blank”>
(CNN) — The space shuttle Endeavour lifted off from Kennedy Space Center early Monday on a two-week mission to the International Space Station.
The shuttle quickly pierced light cloud cover along the Florida coast in a brilliant launch.
The six-member Endeavour crew is delivering a key module to the International Space Station.
Cmdr. George Zamka is leading the STS-130 mission. Joining him aboard are pilot Terry Virts, and mission specialists Nicholas Patrick, Robert Behnken, Stephen Robinson and Kathryn Hire, NASA said.
The crew is delivering a third connecting module, an Italian-built Tranquility node and a seven-windowed cupola to be used as a control room for robotics. The mission also will include three spacewalks.
It’s a busy week for NASA, with the agency also preparing to launch a Solar Dynamics Observatory into orbit aboard an Atlas V rocket on Tuesday.
Only five more shuttle launches are scheduled before the program ends in 2011.
Endeavour was originally scheduled to lift off early Sunday, but low cloud ceilings forced a nearly 24-hour delay.
[Via http://dominicstoughton.wordpress.com]
No comments:
Post a Comment