NASA's space shuttle fleet will never fly again, but the  agency believes it still has plenty to learn from the iconic  vehicles.
Retired shuttles will soon go on display across the country, but some of their pieces may fly again.
NASA technicians acer btp-58a1 battery prepping the grounded shuttles for delivery to museums have been instructed to pull out and hang onto many different pieces, from the windows near the nose to the huge main engines near the orbiters' tails.
Agency engineers will study these parts to help inform sony np-fm50 battery  development of future  spaceships—and some of the hardware may even be used again. 
"No  other vehicle has had anywhere close to the same number of cycles on a lot of  this hardware as the shuttle has," said Jonathan Krezel, who's in charge of the  shuttle transition and retirement program thinkpad t410 battery at NASA headquarters in Washington,  D.C. "Some of this stuff is 25 years old or more. So from the point of view of  creating long-duration survivable space systems in the future, there's a lot of  interest."
Making the shuttles "lickable"
The  touchdown of Atlantis on July 21 marked the end of NASA's  shuttle program after 30 years of operation and 135 space missions.  Atlantis and the other two remaining orbiters, Discovery and  Endeavour, are headed to museums, where they will teach and inspire the  public for years to come.
Atlantis will retire to the Kennedy  Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida, Discovery to the Smithsonian  Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. and Endeavour to Los Angeles'  California Science Center. [Photos:  NASA's Last Shuttle Mission in Pictures]
But the shuttles aren't  being ferried straight from the landing strip to the exhibit hall.
All  three must undergo a lengthy decommissioning  process, much of which is done for safety reasons. Anything that touched  rocket fuel — the thruster system inside each shuttle's nose, for example — must  be removed and scrubbed clean before it's reattached.
"We're making the sony np-fh50 battery vehicle not just safe for trained technicians to walk around, but safe for the  public to walk around," Krezel told SPACE.com. "My favorite phrase is, to make  it lickable."
Other parts will be permanently removed due to safety  concerns. For example, flight-ready shuttles are studded with small explosive  charges that perform various functions, such as deploying landing gear if normal  systems fail. These pyrotechnics are all coming off, Krezel said.
But  safety is not the only driver in this spaceship stripping. Research is a key  factor as well.
Studying the shuttle, piece by  piece
During their long operational lives, Endeavour flew  25 space missions, Atlantis 33 and Discovery a record 39. [NASA's  Space Shuttle Program In nikon d70 battery Pictures: A Tribute]
"The space shuttles are  unique in how they were reusable spacecraft. No one has flown the same  hardware to space and back so many times before," said space history expert  Robert Pearlman, editor of collectSPACE.com and a SPACE.com contributor. "NASA  hopes to learn what effects, if any, such reuse has on spacecraft systems so as  to apply those lessons to future vehicles."
So agency engineers have  asked technicians to hoard some hardware for research purposes. The list of  requests is long and varied, Krezel said, consisting of several thousand line  items. (That doesn't necessarily acer btp-58a1 battery translate into thousands of discrete shuttle  parts, however, because many separate line items may describe a single  part.)
"A lot of this stuff hasn't been taken off since the vehicles were  first built. So it's a dataset that the agency has not had access to, ever,"  Krezel said. "That's a lot of components. That's valves, that's seals, that's  actuators. That's various pieces of plumbing, filters, etc."
The  shuttles' space-flown windows will also be removed, Krezel added. Researchers  will examine them to determine the extent of micrometeoroid and orbital  debris damage. NASA may eventually give the windows to the respective  museums after analysis is complete.
Re-use,  recycle
The biggest pieces of sony dsr-200a battery hardware that NASA will hang onto are  the space shuttle main engines, which sit near the orbiters' tails. The agency  may incorporate these huge engines into its next-generation heavy-lift rocket,  known as the space launch system, Pearlman said.
NASA is considering  re-using other shuttle parts, either in ground tests to support future systems  or as part of the space-flown systems themselves. Vote  Now! The Best Spaceships of All Time
For example, agency engineers  have suggested recycling the shuttles' airlocks, Krezel said.
"Maybe you  could Tinkertoy that with some other equipment and create some capability,"  Krezel said. "Those kind of ideas are always very interesting to nikon d70s battery entertain, but  they require some rigorous engineering analysis to see if that makes  sense."
Seemingly intact museum showpieces
While NASA  wants to make sure it gets as much engineering value as possible out of the  shuttles, the agency is also sensitive to the needs of the museums and the needs  of history, Krezel said.
To that end, NASA is working closely with each samsung slb-11a battery  museum to deliver orbiters that are as intact as possible, and that will inspire  and educate the public as much as possible, he added.
So the museum nikon d50 battery  displays will not be the equivalent of a half-stripped car on blocks in  someone's yard. In fact, most museum visitors will probably not even notice the  extent of NASA's tinkering, Pearlman said.
"While some exterior systems  will be replaced with replicas — such as the main engines — the casual  museum-goer should not be able to tell what was replaced and what remains as  original," Pearlman told SPACE.com in an canon nb-2lh battery email interview.
Krezel said  NASA is planning to have all of the shuttles decommissioned, prepped and  delivered to their respective retirement homes by September 2012.
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