Weather In Florida Means Edwards Touchdown

ANN REALTIME UPDATE 11.30.08 162603 EST: The
124th Shuttle mission and the 22nd for Endeavour is home at Edwards
AFB, safe and sound. For Astronaut Greg Chamitoff, it has
been some six months since he last felt significant
gravity. Chamitoff arrived home in the lower deck of
Endeavour’s crew compartment and laying in a chair on his
back to help his transition.
After 250 orbits of Earth, NASA reports that STS-126 has
concluded safely with space shuttle Endeavour executing a perfect
entry and landing at NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center.
"That was a great way to end a fantastic flight," Capcom Alan
Poindexter radioed the crew from Mission Control. The astronauts
aboard the shuttle have about an hour of duties in front of them to
“safe” the vehicle so technicians can get it ready to
move into its protective orbiter processing facility.
Endeavour arrived at the station Nov. 16, delivering equipment
that will help allow the station to double its crew size to six. In
addition, the STS-126 astronauts delivered Expedition 18 Flight
Engineer Sandra Magnus, who replaced Greg Chamitoff. This was the
27th Shuttle mission to the ISS.
ANN REALTIME UPDATE 11.30.08 1250 EST: The
weather forecast is "no go" for landing at Kennedy Space Center in
Florida today and tomorrow. A front moving through Florida will see
storms around Kennedy's Shuttle Landing Facility on both days.
Mission controllers have given Endeavour the go-ahead for the first
landing opportunity at 4:25 p.m. EST at Edwards Air Force Base in
California.

ANN REALTIME UPDATE 11.30.08 1125 EST: It looks
increasingly likely that California will be the landing site for
the shuttle Endeavour, as NASA has scrubbed both planned landing
attempts for Sunday at Florida's Kennedy Space Center due to storms
over the state... but NASA hasn't made a formal decision as of
yet.
Flight controllers are looking at potential landing
opportunities for Monday, though poor weather
conditions are expected to continue over Florida through the
early part of the week.
NASA would prefer to return the shuttle to KSC, as it saves
money and the logistical hassle of transporting the shuttle across
country from Edwards Air Force Base.
The STS-126 crew has two landing opportunities Sunday at Edwards
-- one at 4:25 pm EST, and a second at 6 pm -- if the weather
conditions are not favorable for a Monday landing in Florida. Stay
tuned.
Original Report
The space shuttle Endeavour crew is expected to complete its
mission to the International Space Station with a landing at NASA's
Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 1:19 pm EST on Sunday,
concluding a 16-day flight, 11 of which were spent docked to the
station.
Those plans are somewhat nebulous at this time, however, due to
forecasted storms over the Space Coast. The Florida prognosis
doesn't improve much on Monday, either... meaning California could
see its first shuttle landing since Atlantis touched down at
Edwards Air Force Base in June 2007.
"One is just as good as the other in our mind," STS-126 mission
manager LeRoy Cain told the Associated Press.
The entry flight control team in Mission Control, Houston, will
evaluate weather conditions at Kennedy before permitting Endeavour
to return to Earth. Sunday landing opportunities at Kennedy are at
1:19 pm and 2:54 pm EST; Edwards opportunities are 4:24 pm and 5:59
pm.

On Saturday, NASA engineers completed their damage assessment of
Endeavour's heat shield, and gave the green light for the shuttle
to re-enter Earth's atmosphere. That go-ahead followed some tense
moments onboard the orbiter, when astronaut Don Pettit noticed a
piece of debris floating away from the shuttle's tail section after
a hydraulic systems test. The 3-inch piece of flotsam was later
identified as a label from the shuttle's payload bay.
"No issue," Mission Control told Endeavour commander Chris
Ferguson.
As ANN reported, the STS-126 mission began
November 14 and prepared the space station to house six crew
members for long-duration missions. The new station cargo includes
a water recovery system, additional sleeping quarters, a second
toilet and a resistance exercise device.
During four spacewalks, the crew serviced the station's two
Solar Alpha Rotary Joints, which allow its solar arrays to track
the sun, and installed new equipment in support of future assembly
missions. The flight also delivered station resident Sandra Magnus
to the outpost.
Greg Chamitoff will return to Earth aboard Endeavour after
spending more than five months aboard the complex.