Had Columbia not occured, the ISS would be done by now.
Columbia was a blow, no doubt about it. However the troubles of the ISS started way before that happened.
Had Columbia not occured, the ISS would be done by now.
When the shuttle fleet is grounded and retired in 2010, the United States will still be several (years) DECADES from having any manned launch capacity. We'll need the Russians and the Europeans to ferry astronauts and supplies to ISS; we won't be able to do it ourselves.
There, I fixed it for you....
When the shuttle fleet is grounded and retired in 2010, the United States will still be several (years) DECADES from having any manned launch capacity. We'll need the Russians and the Europeans to ferry astronauts and supplies to ISS; we won't be able to do it ourselves.
There, I fixed it for you....
Um. No?
With the trouble Russia has been having recently with the Soyuz, I'm beginning to think it's nearly ready for retirement too. The last couple of flights have reentered at a much steeper angle than intended with much higher G loads than normal and landings hundreds of miles short of the target. There has even been a report that the last Soyuz suffered a damaged hatch and destroyed radio antenna because it initially reentered the atmosphere with the wrong attitude.When the shuttle fleet is grounded and retired in 2010, the United States will still be several (years) DECADES from having any manned launch capacity. We'll need the Russians and the Europeans to ferry astronauts and supplies to ISS; we won't be able to do it ourselves.
There, I fixed it for you....
One of the reasons why Congress wants to cut space exploration in favor of other programs is that, according to surveys, the American public believes that NASA's budget is a quarter of the entire federal budget. Americans believe that we're giving NASA too much money, rather than not enough.
Had Columbia not occured, the ISS would be done by now.
Had Columbia not occured, the ISS would be done by now.
By "done" you mean with no habitation module for the originally planned crew compliment of ...was it 6 or 7?? so long ago now.., no centrifuge module, no universal docking module, no docking and stowage module, no propulsion module, no science power platform, and no Russian research module. That kind of complete?
Damn cutbacks.
AG
I've never understood why some politicians always try to cut space exploration in favor of other programs
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