Eileen Collins And Chandra Observatory
A hydrogen fuel leak, which could have caused an engine shutdown, costly
delays
on the launching pad, and a year of technical difficulties didn’t stop
the
successful launch of the $1.5 billion Chandra X-Ray Observatory on the
Space
Shuttle Columbia. Nor did it stop Eileen Collins, 42, from becoming
NASA’s
first female commander ever after 95 missions. Collins, who has logged
over
5,000 hours of airtime in thirty types of aircraft and 537 of those
hours in
space, served as pilot in her last two missions in 1995 and 1997,
and felt well
prepared to handle anything. So, when a short circuit occurred,
as Commander,
Collins braced for every possible emergency, even landing
in Africa, something
that has never before been attempted. The circuit cut
the main computers for two
of the main engines, but backups quickly
responded. In 1995 Collins was a member
of operation Spacehab, the first
flight of the Russian-American Space Program,
which included the deployment
and retrieval of a satellite and a space walk. The
3.8 million mile 1997
mission on Atlantis was NASA’s sixth rendezvous and
docking with the Mir
Space Station. Her most recent mission this July on
Columbia, deployed
the heaviest payload ever launched on the shuttle, the
Chandra X-Ray
Observatory. The observatory will gather information from X-rays
of gaseous
clouds so vast that it takes light more than five million years to go
from
one side to the other. Although nothing can escape the gravity of a
black
hole, the observatory is able to study particles up the last
millisecond before
they are sucked inside. In addition, it can travel to
heights over 200 times
those of the Hubble Space Telescope, or about
one-third the distance to the
Moon. Sally Ride, America’s first woman in
space, called both to congratulate
Collins, and to warn her about the
"hoopla" and media hype that surrounds
breakthroughs in the gender barrier.
Ride recalled responding to a reporter’s
inquiry about whether she would wear
a bra in space, by saying "There is no
sag in zero-g." However, Mir record
holder for longest time in space, Shannon
Lucid, also cautioned Collins.
And while Collins insists she has taken their
advice, less than a month after
her flight she had already given 47 television
interviews and requests are
still coming. She told an Associated Press reporter
that she has tried to
smile and put a different spin on the same questions, but
there is not much
getting around Columbia’s leak of over 2,500 pounds of
hydrogen during the 8
˝-minute climb to orbit, which caused the engines to shut
down one second
early leaving the shuttle seven miles short of its orbital mark.
"Hey we
pulled it off. We did it," she kept telling herself and her
crew.
Although Collins is back to work having missed a vacation due to
flight delays,
writing reports until 2:30 a.m. and waking again at 5:45 a.m.,
she is eager to
vacation with her husband and 3 ˝-year-old daughter Bridget,
preferably to a
beach.