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Space shuttle poised for Wednesday night launch
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-03-11 14:02 CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida – US space shuttle Discovery was prepared for launch on Wednesday on a mission to finish installing the International Space Station's power system and deliver Japan's first live-aboard crew member.
Blastoff was scheduled for 9:20 pm EDT (0120 GMT Thursday) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Meteorologists predicted a 90 percent chance the weather would be good for launch.
The shuttle is to spend two weeks in orbit to deliver a $300 million set of solar wing panels and a new distiller for the station's urine recycling system. The panels are inside a 16-tonne module that will complete the station's 11-segment exterior backbone. The seven-man crew includes Japan's Koichi Wakata, a two-time shuttle veteran who will stay behind on the space station to serve as a flight engineer after the shuttle departs. He replaces NASA astronaut Sandra Magnus, who has been in orbit since November. The station, a $100 billion project of 16 nations, has been under construction 220 miles above Earth for more than a decade. The US space agency has up to nine flights remaining to complete assembly, as well as a final servicing call to the Hubble Space Telescope, before it retires the shuttle fleet next year. |