Shuttle Atlantis Rolls Back to Launch Pad to Ride Out Ernesto

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Aug. 29, 2006

Allard Beutel
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-4769

Bruce Buckingham 
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468 

RELEASE: 06-304

SHUTTLE ATLANTIS ROLLS BACK TO LAUNCH PAD TO RIDE OUT ERNESTO

NASA managers decided early Tuesday to move the Space Shuttle Atlantis 
from its launch pad into the Vehicle Assembly Building for protection 
from approaching Tropical Storm Ernesto, but later in the day, when 
the weather forecast improved, they reversed the decision and began 
moving Atlantis back to the pad. 

Assessments of updated weather forecasts convinced shuttle managers 
that Atlantis would be protected from the storm at the pad at NASA's 
Kennedy Space Center. 

Atlantis is expected to be locked down at the launch pad about 8 p.m. 
EDT Tuesday. The rotating service structure, which will surround the 
spacecraft and serve as a protective barrier from the storm, will be 
put around Atlantis about 30 minutes later. 

Depending on the effects of Ernesto on Kennedy, a new launch date for 
Atlantis' STS-115 mission to the International Space Station could be 
set once storm damage is evaluated and work resumes at the launch 
pad. A launch attempt may be possible next week. 

Kennedy is expected to close ahead of the storm late Tuesday and 
remain closed until at least Thursday. The center's emergency 
operations personnel will stay on-site to monitor the storm and make 
initial damage assessments after it passes. 

The STS-115 crew, Commander Brent Jett, Pilot Chris Ferguson, mission 
specialists Joe Tanner, Dan Burbank, Heide Stefanyshyn-Piper and 
Canadian astronaut Steve MacLean, returned to NASA's Johnson Space 
Center Tuesday morning. Crew members would return to Kennedy after a 
new launch date is scheduled. 

During STS-115, Atlantis' astronauts will deliver and install the 
17.5-ton, bus-sized P3/P4 integrated truss segment on the station. 
The girder-like truss includes a set of giant solar arrays, batteries 
and associated electronics. The P3/P4 truss segment will provide 
one-fourth of the total power-generation capability for the completed 
station. 

For information about the STS-115 crew and mission, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle 

	
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