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Solar array redeployed after successful repair (Astronauts improvised mission succeeds!)
Spaceflightnow.com ^ | November 3, 2007 | WILLIAM HARWOOD

Posted on 11/03/2007 11:57:30 AM PDT by Names Ash Housewares

Physician-astronaut Scott Parazynski, working on the end of a boom carried by the space station's robot arm, successfully repaired a mangled solar array today, cutting away a snarled guidewire, installing five suture-like braces and then standing by while his crewmates extended the array its full 110-foot length.

Working with deliberate care, astronaut Dan Tani, sending commands from a computer inside the shuttle-station complex, extended the array's central mast a half bay at a time, stopping and letting Parazynski assess the health of the repairs as tension slowly built up on the just-installed braces.

There were no problems and as the last bay of the array's mast extended and locked into place, putting some 70 pounds of tension on the blanet's slats, sensors indicated full extension and Tani exclaimed, "Oh, we've got deploy discretes, two deploy discretes!"

"Yay, all right!" someone yelled.

"Beautiful."

"Great news," Parazynski said. "What an accomplishment."

(Excerpt) Read more at spaceflightnow.com ...


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: astronaut; energy; iss; nasa; parazynski; shuttlediscovery; solar; space
This was great news! and quite a bit of drama overhead while America slept.

Without the improvised repair, the array would not have structural integrity and would have had to been jettisoned overboard. Leaving the station with a serious power shortage that would prevent the science labs from being able to have the power necessary, those labs are due for launch very soon too.

All as space nuts are really jazzed about this news today!

America should be damn proud of our NASA astronauts! and Canadians for those manipulator arms that made it possible!

Great work NASA!

1 posted on 11/03/2007 11:57:33 AM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: Names Ash Housewares

Fantastic! Thats what I call field service!


2 posted on 11/03/2007 11:59:05 AM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

what a cutie!

3 posted on 11/03/2007 12:01:33 PM PDT by RDTF ("Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear". Mark Twain)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

bio

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/parazyns.html


4 posted on 11/03/2007 12:03:52 PM PDT by RDTF ("Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear". Mark Twain)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

Great Job Americas’ Astronauts!!!


5 posted on 11/03/2007 12:17:38 PM PDT by shield (A wise man's heart is at his RIGHT hand;but a fool's heart at his LEFT. Ecc 10:2)
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To: Names Ash Housewares
Image hosted by Photobucket.com

6 posted on 11/03/2007 12:21:56 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist)
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To: Chode

that’s too funny!


7 posted on 11/03/2007 12:33:30 PM PDT by RDTF ("Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear". Mark Twain)
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To: RDTF
Image hosted by Photobucket.com when all else fails, duc-it!!!
8 posted on 11/03/2007 12:40:52 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

Job well done by Parazynski and company.


9 posted on 11/03/2007 12:42:45 PM PDT by newzjunkey
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To: Chode

That’s exactly what I thought of when I heard they had repaired it!


10 posted on 11/03/2007 12:43:17 PM PDT by newzjunkey
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To: Names Ash Housewares

That looked very dangerous, hanging out on the end of 100 plus feet of robot arm hanging onto the arm the arm was hanging onto. Add the lethal voltage and it’s just too much fun.


11 posted on 11/03/2007 1:52:04 PM PDT by RightWhale (anti-razors are pro-life)
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To: RightWhale; anymouse; Brett66; SunkenCiv; Captain Beyond
Bravo...

On a side note, If you think you where on the space ping list let me know.. I'm trying to rebuild it..


12 posted on 11/03/2007 1:58:23 PM PDT by KevinDavis (Mitt Romney 08)
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To: Chode

Only one problem: duct tape doesn’t quite work in space. You need specialized adhesives and the tape itself has to withstand the extremes of temperatures of space.


13 posted on 11/03/2007 1:59:03 PM PDT by RayChuang88
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To: Chode

14 posted on 11/03/2007 2:22:03 PM PDT by wolfpat (If you don't like the Patriot Act, you're really gonna hate Sharia Law.)
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To: Names Ash Housewares; Allegra; carlr; wallcrawlr; Tatze; TrueKnightGalahad; blackie; ...
This is why we need men and women in space!

As much as I admire those two plucky Rovers on Mars and Voyager 1 & 2 traveling out billions of miles where no man-made thing has ever traveled, none of these four could have made the repair just done by a human being.

And it will be far into the future before any man-made robot or android will ever be able to reason like a human.

Robots have their place in space, but nothing will replace a human brain and hands on site!

15 posted on 11/03/2007 2:33:43 PM PDT by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: KevinDavis

I was on said space ping list.


16 posted on 11/03/2007 2:56:25 PM PDT by wastedyears (One Marine vs. 550 consultants. Sounds like good odds to me.)
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To: Bender2

Exactly. Many conservatives think NASA should be cut from the federal budget. I think that NASA serves a very important purpose. We need to learn these lessons for the moon and Mars. I’ve been watching this unfold and it’s just amazing how quickly and accurately people can work when pushed. This ranks up there with Apollo 13 and Skylab 2. Applause all the way around.


17 posted on 11/03/2007 3:00:36 PM PDT by AntiKev ("No damage. The world's still turning isn't it?" - Stereo Goes Stellar - Blow Me A Holloway)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

They had no better astronaut to repair it. Scott Parazynski was the Chief of the Astronaut EVA Branch and is basically a spacewalking machine (4 EVAs this mission!).


18 posted on 11/03/2007 3:02:49 PM PDT by burzum (None shall see me, though my battlecry may give me away -Minsc)
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To: Bender2
As much as I admire those two plucky Rovers on Mars and Voyager 1 & 2 traveling out billions of miles where no man-made thing has ever traveled, none of these four could have made the repair just done by a human being.

Umm....the Space Station in and of itself is big and elaborate and expensive for the sole reason of housing humans to.....endlessly circle the earth accomplishing little of note.

You could do dozens of more cool missions like the Mars Rovers and Voyagers actually making interesting discoveries for the money the ISS and the Space Shuttle missions to supply/repair/build it use to do essentially nothing.

19 posted on 11/03/2007 3:07:33 PM PDT by Strategerist
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To: Bender2; All

I don’t mind having robots and humans in space working together..


20 posted on 11/03/2007 3:32:41 PM PDT by KevinDavis (Mitt Romney 08)
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To: AntiKev; All

With the exception of our Military, I think NASA give us the bang for our buck being at .5% of our national budget. If we cut NASA the money is going to be going elsewhere. Like other social welfare programs..


21 posted on 11/03/2007 3:41:01 PM PDT by KevinDavis (Mitt Romney 08)
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To: wolfpat
Throw in some chewed bubble gum and y'all have the makings of a fine improvised tool kit!
22 posted on 11/03/2007 3:44:43 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: KevinDavis; Bender2; All

I don’t mind having robots and humans in space working together..


Dirty Robot Lover!

/SARC


23 posted on 11/03/2007 3:46:34 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: KevinDavis

Yeah I agree. It’s amazing what they can do with the little money they get (although I would advocate a little more to shorten the gap...that and an EELV/DIRECT-based solution rather than the shaft...but that’s for another thread). FYI I was previously on the ping list but I didn’t get this ping for some reason...


24 posted on 11/03/2007 3:46:57 PM PDT by AntiKev ("No damage. The world's still turning isn't it?" - Stereo Goes Stellar - Blow Me A Holloway)
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To: Strategerist; Allegra; carlr; wallcrawlr; Tatze; TrueKnightGalahad; blackie; Larry Lucido; ...
Well, Strat... let me ask you, where do you, or your children or grandchildren and so on, want to be when, not if, but when, a big ass-ed asteroid or comet slams into Earth?

I want my kids or their great-great-great grandkids to have colonies on the Moon, Mars, the rest of the solar system and on the way to other planets orbiting distant stars.

If you want you and your kin to die gloriously in the next global die off, then fine, but keep you cotton picking hands off my kin saving their hind ends!

I want the human race to survive. But folks like you, I guess ya'll just want'a be another species that saved some money and ended up going out feet in the air and will be simply forgotten--

And for someone who calls themselves Strategerist, that shows an ironic lack of strategy and/or common sense, eh?

BTW what is a Strategerist? I looked and I cannot find that spelling meaning anything--

25 posted on 11/03/2007 5:02:54 PM PDT by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: KevinDavis
Re: I don’t mind having robots and humans in space working together..

Neither do I... when they are babes!

26 posted on 11/03/2007 5:05:28 PM PDT by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: Grizzled Bear
Re: Dirty Robot Lover!

Hey, Bear... the fewer fembots you need, the more for me!

27 posted on 11/03/2007 5:07:34 PM PDT by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: Bender2; All

Amen bro!!!!


28 posted on 11/03/2007 5:09:33 PM PDT by KevinDavis (Mitt Romney 08)
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To: Bender2
Image hosted by Photobucket.com Six...

29 posted on 11/03/2007 6:05:37 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist)
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To: Chode
Ya' spose we could get a spacesiut with red and green suspenders?


30 posted on 11/03/2007 6:11:00 PM PDT by Professional Engineer (when you're the geek nobody likes you)
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To: Professional Engineer
Image hosted by Photobucket.com RG rules... 8^)
31 posted on 11/03/2007 6:15:56 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist)
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To: Chode

indeed


32 posted on 11/03/2007 6:31:10 PM PDT by Professional Engineer (when you're the geek nobody likes you)
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To: KevinDavis

[singing] man the capstan off we go as the fiddler swings us round...


33 posted on 11/03/2007 6:48:52 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Monday, October 22, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: Strategerist

“Umm....the Space Station in and of itself is big and elaborate and expensive for the sole reason of housing humans to.....endlessly circle the earth accomplishing little of note.”

Strongly disagree. And a terrible oversimplification of a grand process. Earth itself endlessy orbits the sun too you know.

Human presences in space accomplishes so much.
we learn how to live there, to construct things, and we learn from our mistakes too. we learn by doing, humans must explore themselves, robots are great, but it is in our blood to want to got here ourselves. It is critical to maitain these endeavors in so many ways.

NASA enables astronauts to bring back the visions of space, they bring back what its like to see our earth as an outsider. They bring back what its like to be a child of earth. To see our world as it truly is, an oasis in a vast black expanse.

They take human presence beyond our world. They teach us that the sky is not the limit, that there ARE no limits.

They keep an American/western world presence in space. If we dont. Someone else will most certainly take the lead. China is seeking the high ground now.

There are reasons why this nation is where it is today. Reasons why any of us are here at all. Brave people took the risks and went beyond the horizon. They did so on ships they knew may not return and on imperfect wings.

“A ship in harbor is safe — but that is not what ships are built for.” -John A. Shedd

The oceans are littered with vessels of discovery.

Astronaut Story Musgrave.....

“We have been a frontier culture. We were born out of exploration, we were born out of adventure. We were born out of the plains and the mountains. We’ve been a very physical kind of culture. And so, if you look at adventure, if you look at exploration, if you look at immersion in nature, a physical culture, and all those things, you can see directly how space flight relates to the way America has been born and how it evolved.”

“You have to keep pushing the frontier not just because it’s there, but because that’s how we find things that end up changing humanity,” -Paul Hill, Mission Control

Why Space, Why Explore? Astronaut Story Musgrave...........

We have no choice, Sir. It is the Nature of Humanity, it is the Nature of Life

The Globe was created and Life Evolved, and you look at every single cubic millimeter on this Earth, You can go 30,000 feet down below the Earth surface, You can go 40,000 feet up in the air and Life is There. When you look at the globe down there, you see Teeming Life Everywhere

It is the Power of Life, And maybe I am not just a Human up here, you know. Now Life is Leaping off the Planet. It is heading to other parts of the Solar System, other parts of the Universe

There are those kinds of Pressures. It isn’t simply politics, it is not simply technology, it is really not just the essence of humanity, but it is sort of also, you could look at it as maybe the Essence of Life. I think Teilhard de Chardin, in Phenomenon of Man, I believe he put that incredibly well. So those kind of Forces are at Work. It is the nature of humans to be exploratory and to Push On

Yes, it costs resources and it does cost a lot, and there is a risk, there is a penalty, there is a down side, but Exploration and Pioneering, I think those are the critical things, it is the Essence of what Human Beings are, and that is to try to understand their Universe and to try to participate in the entire Universe and not just their little Neighborhood -Story Musgrave

One of my most convincing arguments for space exploration is the analogy that Earth itself is a spacecraft. Everything we learn about how to function and live in space applies directly to our spacehip Earth. How to recycle air, water, how to generate and use power efficiently, how to grow food in closed ecosystems. All of it is important. All of this can benefit mankind in a world with a fast growing population. Understanding other worlds is how we understand OUR world better, to understand how it formed and where it is going. Its our only home for now.

“We must not cease from exploration, and at the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we began, and to know it for the first time.” T.S. Eliot

Gallup survey.....

“More than three-fourths (77%) of the American public say they support a newplan for space exploration that would include a stepping-stone approach to returnthe space shuttle to flight, complete assembly of the space station, build areplacement for the shuttle, go back to the Moon and then on to Mars and beyond”

Q: Why should America send astronauts to Mars?

NASA Administrator Mike Griffin ........

A: I can give you a bunch of different answers that matter to me. But why did Spain bankroll Magellan to leave port with five ships and head out around the world, two of which never made it past the Canary Islands and two more of which were lost on the way? They got one ship back three years later with something like 20 or so people out of an initial crew of 122 across all the ships. Why’d they do that? It is in the nature of humans to find, to define, to explore and to push back the frontier. And in our time, the frontier is space and will be for a very long time.

Give me a counter example to the statement I’m about to make. When the history books are written, the nations that are preeminent in their time are those nations that dominate the frontiers of their time. The failed societies are the ones that pull back from the frontier. I want our society, America, western society, to be preeminent in the world of the future and I want us not to be a failed society. And the way to do that, universally so, is to push the frontier.

Now we don’t do that with every dollar we’ve got. Obviously, most of our money has to be spent on today’s concerns. But we’re talking about something here that uses six tenths of a percent of the federal budget. This is not exactly spending money like a drunken sailor. This is an investment for our grandchildren’s grandchildren.

I could make a very good argument on the basis of economics, that the European investment in the New World didn’t pay off, really, for Europeans for 400 years. I could make an argument for you that the biggest payoff of European investment in the New World was the existence of America to bail them out of World War 2. Europe would have sunk into a dark age in the 20th century with the set of political activities and behaviors that led to World War 1 and then World War 2, which followed from that. Without the investment in the New World, there would not have been another society elsewhere on the planet to prevent Europe from falling back into a second dark age. And I could make an argument that European investment in the New World was a net loss for hundreds of years and finally was worth the effort.

These kinds of activities, as I say, they’re not large in the grand scheme of things, although it looks large when you write down the budget numbers, and they don’t pay off today. They pay off for our grandchildren’s grandchildren. And I care about that and I think everyone else should, too. -NASA Administrator Mike Griffin

A note was found from the Challenger commander in his breifcase after the accident... Excerpted from Silver Linings : Triumph of the Challenger 7. by June Scobee Rodgers and June Scobee Rogers.

“We have whole planets to explore, we have new worlds to build. We have a solar system to roam in. And if only a tiny fraction of the human race reaches out toward space, the work they do there will totally change the lives of all the billions of humans who remain on earth, just as the strivings of a handful of colonists in the new world totally changed the lives of everyone in Europe, Asia & Africa.”

Had Dick left the note in his briefcase for us to find if something happened? Did he write it on scratch paper to use to quote in a speech? All we’ll ever know is that when we most needed a message, it was there. He left for us his dream for the world, his vision for space exploration.”

The civilizations that lead on the frontier, end up dictating the course of human history.

And that work continues. New designs are being worked on and tests are beginning now. This... is what is next for NASA.......

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vZ8RIcmWAk

Lunar helium 3 may end up powering fusion reactors on earth someday. You never know what is going to matter and change the world.

We learned of lunar helium 3 because of our exploration efforts there.

We must push forward, challenge and improve and yes sometimes manage risk. Always.

Even as individuals. And we all know what it means when we do not do these efforts. It is no different as a nation or a species.

Please consider the above. Consider the grand picture.


34 posted on 11/04/2007 1:21:43 PM PST by Names Ash Housewares
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