Saan man, kailan man, Kapatid!   Higit sa balita, AKSYON!
 







National Corona trial: Chief Justice admits dollar investments
National Lawyers tell Corona: 'Be candid, tell the truth'
National Corona: 'My conscience is clean'
National Gazmin assures Navy of brand-new gear, assets showcased on Navy Day
Entertainment | World | National Lady Gaga rocks Philippines, defies critics
National | Economy AMLA amendments nearing completion - Guingona
Opinion | Special Features ATTY. MEL STA. MARIA: The advantage, questions, standard of a Corona testimony
Opinion SEN. MIRIAM SANTIAGO: A date with destiny
National Not one human rights violator prosecuted under Aquino, says NY-based watchdog
World | Economy Chinese fake parts 'flood' US military -- Senate report
Science | Infotech Voting for Jessica Sanchez outside the US is cheating?
Opinion | Special Features | National FOCUS: No simple framing for Lady Gaga controversy
Entertainment Derek now AKTV's official sports ambassador, suggests breakup with Angel not final
National Jackie Chan denies reports that he will retire soon
Special Features | National TV5 partners with World's No. 1 weather news service
World | Special Features Bee Gees star Robin Gibb dies aged 62 -- family
Special Features | National TV5 joins Brigada Eskwela in Manila, DepEd pleased with turnout
World | National Jewelry worth millions of euros stolen from flat of PH envoy to Portugal Philippe Lhuillier
Lifestyle Inkcanto: The lamb of Erap
World | Special Features Unesco chief denounces murders of two Pakistani journalists
Economy TV5 debuts in the US through tie-up with DISH
World Suu Kyi to give Nobel talk in Oslo June 16 - Nobel panel

End of an era as astronauts pack up for last shuttle ride home

The space shuttle Atlants is seen docked to the International Space Station with the earth in the background in this NASA photo. Astronauts are preparing to take the shuttle on its last trip home, marking the end of the US's space shuttle program. (Reuters)

InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

HOUSTON - The shuttle Atlantis astronauts finished packing more than 2 tonnes of old equipment and trash from the International Space Station into a cargo hauler on Sunday for the last shuttle ride back to Earth.

The Italian-built storage pod will be loaded into Atlantis' payload bay early Monday, in advance of the shuttle's departure from the station early on Tuesday. The 13-day mission, the last of NASA's 30-year-old space shuttle program, is due to end with a landing at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 5:57 a.m. EDT (0957 GMT) on Thursday.

"This is really the last train out of town," Atlantis commander Chris Ferguson said during an inflight interview. "I don't think the full magnitude of everything is really going to hit us until after the wheels stop."

Ferguson and his three crewmates delivered more than 5 tonnes of food, clothing, equipment and other supplies for the outpost, a $100 billion project of 16 countries that was finished earlier this year after more than a decade of construction 220 miles (350 km) above Earth.

With help from the six-member live-aboard station crew, the astronauts also packed up 2.5 tonnes of old equipment, including 12 laptop computers, foam packaging and other items no longer needed on the station.

In all, the crew put in the equivalent of 150 hours of labor transferring cargo, plus oversaw a spacewalk by two space station astronauts to pack up a refrigerator-sized coolant pump that broke last year.

The supplies aboard Atlantis are intended to tide over the station until NASA's newly hired cargo delivery firms begin flying next year. "The space station is actually in very good shape now for the retirement of the space shuttle," said flight director Chris Edelen.

EYES ON DEEP SPACE

NASA meanwhile, wants to ramp up development of a new capsule-style spacecraft and heavy-lift booster that can ferry people into deep space, beyond the station's orbit where the shuttles cannot fly.

Crew ferry flights to the station will be handled exclusively by Russia until and unless U.S. firms develop spaceships capable of orbital spaceflight.

NASA is supporting efforts by four firms -- Boeing, Space Exploration Technologies, Sierra Nevada Corp. and Blue Origin, a space travel start-up backed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos -- with technology development contracts worth $269 million.

NASA hopes the new vehicles will be ready to fly in about 2015. Russia charges the United States more than $50 million per person for Soyuz capsule transportation and training.

Atlantis arrived at the station on July 10, becoming the 37th and final mission to the station. Over the past 30 years, NASA also flew 98 other shuttle missions to deploy satellites and observatories, including the Hubble Space Telescope, and to conduct research and test technologies.

The shuttle proved to be much more complicated and labor-intensive to prepare for flight, and not as safe as expected. Two orbiters were lost in accidents, killing 14 astronauts.

The end of the program will hit central Florida, Houston and other shuttle operational hubs hard, with thousands of engineers and technicians due to lose their jobs shortly after Atlantis lands.

"You have to come to terms with the end before you can really put on a new beginning," Ferguson said.

"I think once we can finally get over the fact that the shuttle is gone ... I believe we'll begin to pick up the pieces and everyone will see that we really do have some vibrant programs out there that we're working on."