Amidst greetings, hugs and handshakes with the 11-member shuttle Atlantis crew, who arrived at the orbiting space outpost, Indian American astronaut Sunita Williams wrapped up her six-month long tour of duty as a station crew member by switching places with Mission Specialist Clayton Anderson.
Ms Sunita will now start packing her stuff to return home on June 19 after her longest and wonderful sojourn in space. She is looking forward and longing to meet her family, especially her parents, Deepak and Bonnie Pandya, her husband Michael Williams and above all her dog, “Gorby”.
However, amid the smiles and salutations, questions remained unanswered about a section of peeled-back thermal blanket on the shuttle that is to bring back Sunita and her crew members back to earth.
Engineers continued to review photographs of the affected area to determine whether it could pose a problem when Atlantis returns to Earth.
NASA is taking no chances after the Colombia disaster in February 2003, when Indian-born astronaut Kalpana Chawla and six other crew members perished mid-air.
Focus on gap
NASA engineers are focusing their attention on a gap about 4 inches by 6 inches that was discovered after Friday’s launch from Kennedy Space Centre.