'ET Comes Home' for NASA fuel tank's ride
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[May 25, 2016]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A giant NASA
fuel tank completed its final journey on Saturday, with crowds cheering
on its parade along Los Angeles streets to a science center where it
will go on display with the U.S. space shuttle Endeavour.
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Eddye Chapman takes a picture of herself as the space shuttle
Endeavour's external fuel tank ET-94 makes its way to the California
Science Center in Exposition Park in Los Angeles, California, U.S. May
21, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson |
The orange tank, weighing 65,000 lb (29,500 kg) and 154 feet (47
meters) in length, is the only one of its kind. It was never used in
a shuttle launch, which would have blown it to pieces.
The California Science Center called the parade of the fuel tank,
which stands about three stories tall when towed on its side by a
truck, "ET Comes Home," in a play on the "external tank" name and
the 1982 movie "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial."
The tank, ET-94, arrived at the center after a 16-mile (26-km)
journey, the center said on Twitter. Its arrival capped a trip that
started in New Orleans aboard a barge that passed through the Panama
Canal and docked at Marina del Rey on Wednesday.
 The transport was a sequel of sorts to the 2012 mission to tow
Endeavour from the Los Angeles airport to the science center, a feat
witnessed by 1.5 million.
Crowds were smaller this time, but rows of spectators and children
in homemade astronaut helmets lined the curbs along the route to see
the tank pass and pose for selfie pictures with it. A dozen U.S.
astronauts, including Garrett Reisman and Sandra Magnus, made
appearances along the journey.
"It's been a very smooth ride," said Science Center spokeswoman
Shell Amega.
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The tank is longer than the Statue of Liberty from torch to the
feet. But it is neither as wide nor tall as the space shuttle,
allowing it to squeeze more easily through the streets of the
second-largest U.S. city.
At various points, light poles were swung around to allow the fuel
tank to pass.
The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
donated the tank. It was designed to carry propellants to thrust a
space shuttle into orbit and then detach before disintegrating as it
fell to the ocean.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis and Lucy Nicholson; Editing by Mary
Milliken)
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