05/08/2005

Nasa clear Discovery for landing

Nasa have informed the astronauts aboard the space shuttle Discovery that a further repair to a protective thermal blanket is not required.

The shuttle has been cleared for re-entry on Monday despite an area of damage to a protective thermal insulation blanket just below the port side pilot's observation window.

The damage was noticed on Wednesday as work was successfully completed on the removal of a small portion of ceramic cloth protruding between two of the crucial tiles on the shuttle's re-entry heat shield.

"We have good news," Mission Control informed the astronauts on Discovery as they broke the news that engineers did not think that the small tear in the protective heat blanket would need to be repaired by a fourth spacewalk.

Following the tragic loss of Columbia in 2002, every inch of the external protective heat shield and crucial areas where high re-entry temperatures are generated due to friction with the earth's atmosphere have been inspected.

Nasa Shuttle project managers said that they had "left no stone unturned" in an effort to make sure that Discovery would make a safe return to earth on Monday.

However, a leaked report to the New York Times has raised concern that there are continuing problems with the application of insulation foam to the Shuttle's external fuel tank.

A piece of insulation foam was spotted breaking away from the surface of the tank during last Tuesday's launch. Though it did not strike Discovery, a similar incident in 2002 was blamed for puncturing the heat shield on the leading edge of Columbia's wing to the loss of the craft on re-entry.

The Space Shuttle programme will again be on hold pending a further investigation of the problems with Discovery.

(SP/KMcA)

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