Shuttle Discovery Launch Now No Earlier Than Feb. 19

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Feb. 3, 2009

Candrea Thomas
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
321-867-2468
candrea.k.thomas@nasa.gov

John Yembrick
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
john.yembrick-1@nasa.gov

RELEASE: 09-25

SHUTTLE DISCOVERY LAUNCH NOW NO EARLIER THAN FEB. 19

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- During a review of space shuttle Discovery's 
readiness for flight, NASA managers decided Tuesday to plan a launch 
no earlier than Feb. 19. The new planning date is pending additional 
analysis and particle impact testing associated with a flow control 
valve in the shuttle's main engines. 

Discovery's STS-119 mission to the International Space Station 
originally had been targeted for Feb. 12.

The valve is one of three that channels gaseous hydrogen from the 
engines to the external fuel tank. One of these valves in shuttle 
Endeavour was found to be damaged after its mission in November. As a 
precaution, Discovery's valves were removed, inspected and 
reinstalled.

The Space Shuttle Program will convene a meeting on Feb. 10 to assess 
the analysis. On Feb. 12, NASA managers and contractors will finalize 
the flight readiness review, which began Tuesday, to address the flow 
control valve issue and to select an official launch date.

The 14-day mission will deliver the station's fourth and final set of 
solar arrays, completing the orbiting laboratory's truss, or 
backbone. The arrays will provide the electricity to fully power 
science experiments and support the station's expanded crew of six in 
May. Altogether, the station's 240-foot-long arrays can generate as 
much as 120 kilowatts of usable electricity -- enough to provide 
about forty-two 2,800-square-foot homes with power.

Discovery also will carry a replacement distillation assembly for the 
station's new water recycling system. The unit is part of the Urine 
Processing Assembly that removes impurities from urine in an early 
stage of the recycling process. The Water Recovery System was 
delivered and installed during the STS-126 mission in November, but 
the unit failed after Endeavour's departure.

Joining Archambault on STS-119 will be Pilot Tony Antonelli and 
Mission Specialists Joseph Acaba, Richard Arnold, John Phillips, 
Steve Swanson and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Koichi 
Wakata. Wakata will replace Sandra Magnus aboard the station. She 
will return home with the Discovery crew after three months in space.

Former science teachers Acaba and Arnold are now fully-trained NASA 
astronauts. They will make their first journey to orbit on the 
mission and step outside the station to conduct critical spacewalking 
tasks.

STS-119 will be Discovery's 36th mission and the 28th shuttle flight 
dedicated to station assembly and maintenance.

For more information about the STS-119 mission, including images and 
interviews, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle  

	
-end-



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