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hide captionAstronauts Mike Hopkins and Rick Mastracchio replace a pump on the International Space Station during a spacewalk last month.
NASA/Reuters/Landov
Astronauts Mike Hopkins and Rick Mastracchio replace a pump on the International Space Station during a spacewalk last month.
NASA/Reuters/Landov
The White House has approved NASA's call for four more years for the International Space Station, ensuring the orbiting science laboratory's will keep going for another decade, according to documents obtained by The Orlando Sentinel.
The newspaper writes:
"The decision follows years of pressure by top NASA officials, who consider the station a critical steppingstone to future exploration. But a four-year extension likely would cost NASA about $3 billion a year from 2021 to 2024. That's a major chunk of the agency's annual budget, which is now about $17 billion, and a longer mission could force NASA to make tough financial decisions in the future."Meanwhile, Space.com reports that a huge solar flare has caused the launch of a supply mission to the space station by private firm Orbital Sciences.
"The administration's approval, however, doesn't guarantee that the station, which has been continuously occupied since 2000, will survive past its current end date of 2020. At some point, Congress must approve a NASA budget that includes an extension of the station's life. The plan also must get the support of whoever wins the White House in 2016 — though the backing of President Barack Obama now might make it harder for the next administration to renege."
"Early this morning the Antares launch team decided to scrub today's launch attempt due to an unusually high level of space radiation that exceeded by a considerable margin the constraints imposed on the mission to ensure the rocket's electronic systems are not impacted by a harsh radiation environment," Orbital Sciences officials said in a statement on Wednesday.
Space.com says the solar flare poses no threat to the six astronauts currently aboard the station, but it pushes back the already delayed resupply mission that was originally set to launch in mid-December but was put on hold as spacewalking astronauts performed emergency repairs to the station's cooling system.