2006年VOA标准英语-Space Shuttle 'Discovery' Launch Set for Saturd(在线收听) |
By Jim Bertel
---------- It has been three years since the space shuttle Columbia disintegrated in the skies over Texas, killing the seven astronauts on board. The spacecraft was critically damaged on liftoff when a piece of foam insulation weighing less than a kilogram broke off of the external fuel tank and hit the shuttle's left wing. Since then, NASA has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to modify the fuel tank to prevent a similar accident from happening again. Yet last year, on the first shuttle flight since the accident, foam debris continued to break free. After further redesign and testing, the shuttle has been given the green light to fly again. NASA's chief safety officer and chief engineer initially disagreed with the decision. John Logsdon is the director of George Washington University's Space Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. "Some engineers and some of the safety people in NASA are concerned that the external tank, the source of foam that doomed Columbia, still has not been adequately redesigned and that there is a high possibility, maybe even a probability, over a number of missions of a piece of foam coming off that could cause damage," he said. If there is severe damage to the shuttle's heat shield tiles, the crew can stay aboard the International Space Station until a rescue shuttle arrives. Discovery astronaut Michael Fossum believes the shuttle is ready to fly. "I won't say we're perfect," he said, "but we're as good as we're going to get and you know, it's gone great, we're really ready and it's exciting to be here within sight of the launch pad at last." If the mission is a success, the first of 16 additional shuttle flights to complete construction of the space station could fly as early as late August. The shuttle fleet is scheduled to be retired in 2010. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/6/33769.html |