Hubble mission brings space debris risk: Nasa

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US shuttle Atlantis faces nearly twice the risk of being struck by debris on a mission next month to the Hubble telescope, due to the high levels of space litter floating at the altitude of Hubble's orbit, NASA said Monday. "It's a very challenging mission. We have hazards we don't typically have for an ISS (International Space Station) mission," NASA space shuttle program manager John Shannon told a news conference. "We have a one-in-180 chance of getting some type of catastrophic damage from micro-meteorites/orbiting debris (MMOD) compared to an ISS mission, which is typically a one-in-300 chance," he said. Hubble is orbiting some 563 kilometres above earth, compared with 354 kilometres for the ISS. When the risk faced by a shuttle mission is greater than one-in-200, the decision to go ahead with the flight has to come from the highest authorities in NASA, said Shannon. But he expected they would give the green light for the Atlantis mission to lift off on what will be its final mission to conduct maintenance work on Hubble. "Our risk has increased, but our ability to mitigate the risk has increased. So it makes us feel pretty good about it," said Shannon. "MMOD is the biggest risk for all shuttle flights" and the risk grows the higher above the earth's surface the shuttle flies, he said. Space has become more littered and dangerous in the past year due to mishaps, tests and aborted missions involving American, Chinese and Russian satellites and rockets, he said. NASA developed new methods to inspect and repair damage to the space shuttle after heat tiles on the Columbia shuttle were damaged on lift-off in 2003, causing the vehicle to disintegrate as it re-entered the earth's atmosphere, killing everyone on board. The US space agency has plans to replace the aging shuttle fleet with a new space vehicle Orion, set to launch in 2014. The new spacecraft will pick up where the shuttle leaves off, re-supplying the International Space Station, as well as undertaking other space missions, including moon landings.

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