Space shuttle comes to 'final stop' after 30 years
CAPE CANAVERAL, FL
In an almost anticlimactic end to the 30-year-old program,
Atlantis and its four astronauts glided to a ghostly landing in
near-darkness after one last visit to the International Space
Station, completing the 135th and final shuttle flight.
It was a moment of both triumph and melancholy.
"I saw grown men and grown women crying today -- tears of joy to
be sure," said launch director Mike Leinbach. "Human emotions
came out on the runway today, and you couldn't suppress them."
Now the spaceship and the two other surviving shuttles will
become museum pieces, like the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo capsules
and the Wright brothers' flying machine before them. NASA
astronauts, a dwindling breed, will have to hitch rides to the
space station aboard Russian Soyuz capsules for at least three to
five years. And thousands more shuttle workers will lose their
jobs, beginning with a round of layoffs on Friday.
The spaceship's return was witnessed at the Kennedy Space Center
and Houston's Johnson Space Center by a relatively small crowd,
mostly of NASA family and friends, compared with the 1 million who
watched Atlantis lift off on July 8.
In Houston, flight director Tony Ceccacci, who presided over
Atlantis' safe return, choked up while signing off from Mission
Control for the final time.
"The work done in this room, in this building, will never again
be duplicated," he told his team before the doors opened and the
center filled with dozens of past and present flight controllers.
Shuttle commander Christopher Ferguson and his crew seized every
opportunity to thank the thousands of workers who got them safely
to and from orbit and guided them through the 13-day flight.
"After serving the world for over 30 years, the space shuttle's
earned its place in history. And it's come to a final stop," he
radioed after Atlantis touched down just before dawn.
"We copy your wheels stop," Mission Control replied. "Job
well done, America."
NASA is getting out of the business of sending cargo and
astronauts to the space station, outsourcing the job to private
companies.
The first privately operated supply run is expected later this
year. But it will be an unmanned flight. It could be several years
before private companies fly astronauts to the space station, which
is expected to carry on for at least another decade. In the
meantime, NASA will rely on the Russians for rides.
The longer-term future for American space exploration is hazy, a
huge concern for many at NASA. President Barack Obama has set a
goal of sending astronauts to an asteroid by 2025 and Mars in the
mid-2030s. But the space agency has yet to even settle on a rocket
design.
Thursday, though, belonged to Atlantis and its crew: Ferguson,
co-pilot Douglas Hurley, Rex Walheim and Sandra Magnus, who during
their mission delivered a year's worth of food and other supplies
to the space station and took out the trash.
They were greeted with cheers, whistles and shouts by 2,000
people who gathered near the landing strip -- astronauts' families
and friends, as well as shuttle managers and NASA brass. Ferguson
and his crew were later swarmed on the runway by well-wishers.
Bringing the shuttle home in the dark was not exactly a dramatic
way to end the program. NASA actually had two landing opportunities
Thursday morning -- one before daybreak, the other 90 minutes, or
one orbit, later, both of them dictated by the day and time of
launch and the length of the mission. But NASA always prefers to
use the first available landing opportunity because the weather in
Florida can deteriorate rapidly. And the space agency had no
intention of departing from that practice merely for a better photo
op.
As a thank-you to workers -- especially those losing their jobs --
NASA parked Atlantis outside its hangar for several hours so
employees could gather round and say goodbye. Close to 1,000 stood
in the midday heat, waving American flags and paper fans and
photographing the shuttle.
Angie Buffaloe wept. Three colleagues in her engineering office
will lose their jobs Friday.
"I spend more time with these guys than I do with my family,"
said Buffaloe, a 22-year space center worker. "We've been through
everything: divorce, sick children, grandchildren. They've been
there. We've shared life together ... and now their last day is
today."
As of Thursday, the Kennedy Space Center work force numbered
11,500, down from a shuttle-era peak of 18,000 in 1992. Between
1,500 and 1,800 layoffs are coming Friday, and 2,000 more are
expected in the coming weeks and months.
"I want them to stick their chests out proudly to say that they
were a part of the most incredible era in American spaceflight, in
anybody's spaceflight," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden Jr., a
former shuttle commander, told reporters on the runway.
The shuttle was NASA's longest-running space exploration
program, making its inaugural flight in 1981.
Shuttles launched the Hubble Space Telescope and fixed its
blurry vision; built the space station, the world's largest
orbiting structure; and opened the final frontier to women,
minorities, schoolteachers, even a prince. The first American to
orbit the Earth, John Glenn, became the oldest person ever in
space, thanks to the shuttle. He was 77 at the time; he turned 90
this week.
Two of the five shuttles -- Challenger and Columbia -- were
destroyed, one at launch, the other during the ride home. Fourteen
lives were lost.
Altogether, the shuttle fleet flew 542 million miles, circled
Earth 21,152 times, carried 355 people from 16 countries and spent
a combined 1,333 days in space -- nearly four years.
The decision to retire the shuttle and focus on venturing
farther into space was made seven years ago under President George
W. Bush.
An American flag that flew on the first shuttle flight and
returned to orbit aboard Atlantis was left behind at the space
station. The first company to get astronauts there from U.S. soil
will claim the flag as a prize.
In the meantime, Atlantis will go on display at the Kennedy
Space Center Visitors Complex in 2013. Space shuttle Discovery is
headed for a Smithsonian Institution hangar in Virginia. And
Endeavour is bound for the California Science Center in Los
Angeles.
Said Ferguson: "I want that picture of a young 6-year-old boy
looking up at a space shuttle in a museum and saying, `Daddy, I
want to do something like that when I grow up."'