NASA retracts solar array on station
In fits and starts, NASA began retracting via remote control a
115-foot solar panel on the international space station Wednesday,
likening the tricky task to folding a road map back up and stuffing it
in the glove compartment.
The electricity-generating solar array served as a temporary power
source aboard the orbiting outpost. NASA needed to move it out of the
way so that a new, permanent pair of solar wings could rotate in the
direction of the sun.
The folding-up began shortly before 1:30 p.m. EST and was expected to
take about five hours.
Flight controllers on the ground and astronauts at the space station
were forced to unfold sections of the golden array they had just
retracted in order to smooth out creases and counter slack in the
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