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    NASA: Space station may be evacuated by late November

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Astronauts may need to take the unprecedented step of temporarily abandoning the International Space Station if last week's Russian launch accident prevents new crews from flying there this fall.

    Until officials figure out what went wrong with Russia's essential Soyuz rockets, there will be no way to launch any more astronauts before the current residents have to leave in mid-November.

    The unsettling predicament comes just weeks after NASA's final space shuttle flight.

    "We have plenty of options," NASA's space station program manager, Mike Suffredini, assured reporters Monday. "We'll focus on crew safety as we always do."

    Abandoning the space station, even for a short period, would be an unpleasant last resort for the world's five space agencies that have spent decades working on the project. Astronauts have been living aboard the space station since 2000, and the goal is to keep it going until 2020.

    Suffredini said flight controllers could keep a deserted space station operating indefinitely, as long as all major systems are working properly. The risk to the station goes up, however, if no one is on board to fix equipment breakdowns.

    Six astronauts from three countries presently are living on the orbiting complex. Three are due to leave next month; the other three are supposed to check out in mid-November. They can't stay any longer because of spacecraft and landing restrictions.

    The Sept. 22 launch of the very next crew — the first to fly in this post-shuttle era — already has been delayed indefinitely. Russia's Soyuz spacecraft have been the sole means of getting full-time station residents up and down for two years. The capsule is parked at the station until they ride it home.

    To keep the orbiting outpost with a full staff of six for as long as possible, the one American and two Russians due to return to Earth on Sept. 8 will remain on board at least an extra week.

    As for supplies, the space station is well stocked and could go until next summer, Suffredini said. Atlantis dropped off a year's supply of goods just last month on the final space shuttle voyage. The unmanned craft destroyed Wednesday was carrying 3 tons of supplies.

    For now, operations are normal in orbit, Suffredini noted, and the additional week on board for half the crew will mean additional science research.

    The Soyuz has been extremely reliable over the decades; this was the first failure in 44 Russian supply hauls for the space station. Even with such a good track record, many in and outside NASA were concerned about retiring the space shuttles before a replacement was ready to fly astronauts.

    Russian space officials have set up an investigation team and until it comes up with a cause for the accident and a repair plan, the launch and landing schedules remain in question. None of the spacecraft debris has been recovered yet; the wreckage fell into a remote, wooded section of Siberia. The third stage malfunctioned; a sudden loss of pressure apparently was noted between the engine and turbopump.

    While a crew may well have survived such an accident because of safety precautions built into the manned version of the rocket, no one wants to take any chances.

    One or two unmanned Soyuz launches are on tap for October, one commercial and the other another space station supply run. Those would serve as important test flights before putting humans on board, Suffredini said.

    NASA considered vacating the space station before, following the space shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003. Back then, shuttles were still being used to ferry some station residents back and forth. Instead, the station got by with two-man crews for three years because of the significant cutback in supplies.

    The space station's population doubled in 2009, to six. It wasn't until the space station was completed this year that science research finally took priority.

    Even if the space shuttles still were flying, space station crews still would need Soyuz-launched capsules to serve as lifeboats, Suffredini said. The capsules are certified for no more than 6½ months in space, thus the need to regularly rotate crews. Complicating matters is the need to land the capsules during daylight hours in Kazakhstan, resulting in weeks of blackout periods.

    NASA wants American private companies to take over crew hauls, but that's three to five years away at best. Until then, Soyuz capsules are the only means of transporting astronauts to the space station.

    Japan and Europe have their own cargo ships and rockets, for unmanned use only. Commercial front-runner Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, plans to launch a space station supply ship from Cape Canaveral at the end of November. That would be put on hold if no one is on board to receive the vessel.

    Suffredini said he hasn't had time to consider the PR impact of abandoning the space station, especially coming so soon after the end of the 30-year shuttle program.

    "Flying safely is much, much more important than anything else I can think about right this instant," he said. "I'm sure we'll have an opportunity to discuss any political implications if we spend a lot of time on the ground. But you know, we'll just have to deal with them because we're going to do what's safest for the crew and for the space station."

    ___

    Online:

    NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html

     
     
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    634 comments

    • Sundowner  •  5 mths ago
      It's unbelievable that NASA got into this situation. NASA retired the shuttle before another craft was able to reach the ISS. No backup system for getting astronauts to and from there. I bet Obama already has Atlantis jacked up and the tires ripped off Atlantis. At least one shuttle should have been ready for such an emergency.
    • Apollo  •  5 mths ago
      Elenin is coming.....yu55 is on track for nov......fema drills also in nov...what are the odds?!!!
    • What Now  •  5 mths ago
      "He will come to take himself to the corner of the Moon,
      Where he will be taken and placed on alien land,
      The unripe fruit will be the source of great scandal,
      Great blame, to the other great praise."
      *Nostradamus: Century 9 Quatrain 65

      "You will hear of a dwelling-place in the heavens, above the earth, that shall fall with a great crash. It will appear as a blue star. Very soon after this, the ceremonies of my people will cease."
      *Hopi Prophecy: During the advent of the Great Purification this is the ninth and final sign of the coming of the Fifth World.

      A question also: During solar max years, which we are approaching, does every solor storm and flare event cause the atmosphere to expand immediately or is this slowly acculative ? How long does that take to happen? I know it is a valuable event as the increased friction helps clears low orbiting space trash but if left unmanned won't the station possibly be at risk from this should the sun experience a major outburst soon?
    • No  •  5 mths ago
      Another failure of the Obama administration. One of many.
    • PURPLE HAZE  •  5 mths ago
      So much for, not ever having a back up plan or anything else by congress!
    • Billy  •  5 mths ago
      I blame it all on Curious George Bush!
    • shelly  •  5 mths ago
      Soon, we won't have any space pictures of any of the storms, hurricanes, clouds, nothing of fascination, of importance in our lives to know how bad something is, because obama is shutting them down, such a nice guy, wishes the muslims well, but not Americans.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 mths ago
      Well, say goodbye to NASA... You can't operate a space station without the shuttle. Having to rely on a corrupt communist nation for that is insane. America is in trouble...
    • TEvans  •  5 mths ago
      The Russians charge the US $51 million per seat for hitching a ride to the space station. This is slated to go up to $55.9 million in 2013. I say we pull the shuttles out of mothballs and start charging the Russians...little extra cash couldn't hurt.
    • Michael K  •  5 mths ago
      Wait Russia is helping North Korea then the rocket carrying supplies to the U.S.- Russian space station mysteriously blows up. Come on America stop buying crap from China, Russia, and North Korea all their trying to do is destroy the United States of America, bird in feather flock together. Wake up Congress Tax the hell out of Chinese Goods and make Made in America mean something again.
    • John Chuck  •  5 mths ago
      Should have never been so short sighted and excluded China from participating in the space station; the exclusion neither stop nor slow down Chinese space exploration and we could have used their space shuttles now.
    • Heather  •  5 mths ago
      That stupid space station is part of the problem. We funneled all of our resources into it and didn't bother to think ahead. Now you have no shuttles, we're getting rides from the Russians, and this happened. Great, just great.
    • Rick Lujan  •  5 mths ago
      so what at least they wont be spending my taxes on more on space junk
    • Ben Snowden  •  5 mths ago
      The "Short Bus" cadre that run NASA demonstrate the "Peter Principle" at every turn... We need vision and motivational leadership to make things happen and so far, all we have to look at are a couple of little rovers on Mars and a space station that we can't get to now unless we beg a ride on a Russian rocket. We put men on the moon with 1950 and 60's era engineering and now we can't even get to low earth orbit anymore... The shame of it is beyond belief!!

      The President should have kept the shuttles running for another couple of years until a new man-certified launch vehicle could replace them. The former Astronauts like Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin would be better choices to run NASA then the present culls that pretend to do so... If they couldn't be persuaded to abandon their retirements, then why not Dr. Robert Zubrin who at least has shown a modicum of intellect and foresight and who actually has a mission plan for manned exploration of Mars we could accomplish with a modest budget.

      We need to free ourselves from dependency on other countries... It's a matter of national security and a matter of national prestige.
    • Politically incorrect  •  5 mths ago
      What is so great about going to the moon or exploring space?
      What is wrong with "feeding the poor" on earth first?
      Space and the moon have been around for millions of years.
      So what if we don't explore them in the next century or so?
      Stop the suffering in humanity first.
      That's a pretty lofty and noble goal.
      We went to the moon. We went into space. So what???
      We get to thump our chest a little.
      While the poor is still starving.
      Where is the greatness???
    • WilliamM  •  5 mths ago
      Brilliant! When NASA began, it was headed by visionaries and fed by a belief in American exceptionalism and pride to remain the greatest nation in the world. What was accomplished in a decade was nothing short of miraculous.

      Since that time, NASA has been led by a series of bumbling bureaucrats with low budgets, no vision, and incompetent management. Today, we could not even duplicate what we accomplished 4 decades ago--we lack the knowledge and technology. Pathetic!

      Space exploration is handicapped by two groups of people, the Luddites who lack any vision and believe that mankind should stick to this planet and the liberal "feed the poor" group who think that money spent exploring space should be spent feeding the ever-ravenous gaping maw of those who will not feed themselves.

      Both groups fail to realize that it is by striving for great things--things that seem impossible to achieve--that mankind has made its greatest progress. We lack great leaders because there are no great challenges to create them--no unexplored country. We lack visionaries, because we have become so consumed with petty issues and the vain pursuit of total equality in everything, created by the liberal myth of the perfectibility of mankind.

      We need to rid ourselves of this idiot notion of political correctness and the myth of fairness as a political goal, and return the the challenge of striving for greatness. We reached the moon in less than 10 years. In truth, we (mankind) have accomplished NOTHING since then worthy of note. Oh, we have sent a bunch of satellites into space and found a few distant planets, but we have achieved nothing that would inspire us to achieve greatness. I mean look what we have elected to the Presidency . . . a man of no substance, who has accomplished nothing in his life of merit, with little ability, whose only articulated vision is "Hope and Change."

      Where are the men of vision who see mankind as being on the cusp of greatness rather than in a decline into mediocrity? Without great challenges, mankind stultifies, ferments and dies.

      Space is that new challenge. It is that new hope, that unexplored country, that unlimited opportunity for adventure and reward.

      We need a vibrant, massively funded space program to revitalize our national spirit and our national technological development. Today we are merely improving on what was invented four decades ago . . . without the even greater challenges presented by loftier goals offered by planetary exploration by men and women in space, we will continue our directionless meandering into the miasma of mediocrity.
    • Wolann  •  5 mths ago
      Hell too bad the US retired it's shuttles before having a replacement. I think it was a bad idea to do away with shuttles myself. They should of came up with a new shuttle to replace the old ones.
    • Randy  •  5 mths ago
      So goes our space program. by now we should have had manned stations on the moon and manned flights to Mars. Instead we have anchor babies galore.
    • Byron  •  5 mths ago
      Yeah, this is bad and the U.S. is feckless in planning a follow-on to the Shuttle etc. But can the ISS be left to the automated systems without fatally damaging it? Seems like there was always an astronaut wrench-turner needed when major systems went haywire aboard the ISS.

      Bet you dollars to donuts that the ISS can't be left unpressurized w/o ruining it. Eventually, it will need its altitude adjusted or the orbit will decay. Since this is most recently a Russia-caused problem, let one or two of their comrade cosmonauts stay up there. They never seemed to mind staying a year or more in the past.

      God, we're dumb to fall for this Russian story in the first place.
    • RLB  •  5 mths ago
      Why are we depending on the Russians. That is about as smart as borrowing money from the Chinese.
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