Astronauts worked Sunday to give NASA a closer look at a troubling gouge on the Endeavour's protective heat shield to help determine whether they need to repair the 3-inch (7.6-centimeter) wound on the space shuttle's belly, AP reported. Astronaut Charles Hobaugh used the international station's robotic arm to pull a 50-foot (15-meter) laser-tipped boom from Endeavour's cargo bay and hand it off to the shuttle's robotic arm. Later in the day, teacher-turned-astronaut Barbara Morgan and crewmate Tracy Caldwell was to gingerly maneuver the shuttle's robotic arm to scan the damage in the difficult-to-reach belly area. The laser will help engineers create a three-dimensional image of the gash, allowing them to determine how deep the gouge is and whether repairs are needed. The space agency planned to spend several hours on the detailed inspection of the 3½-by-2-inch (9-by-5-centimeter) gash. It was caused by a piece of foam that came off the shuttle's external fuel tank during liftoff last week, striking tiles that insulate the ship from the intense heat of re-entry to Earth, NASA said. The space agency will not know how serious the ding is or whether astronauts need to repair the damage during a spacewalk until it is examined. Adding a spacewalk to the mission is less likely now that managers know the gash was not caused by heavier and potentially more damaging ice like they initially suspected. They learned this after examining video from cameras retrieved from Endeavour's booster rockets, which were towed back from the Atlantic. A grapefruit-sized piece of foam appears to have come off a bracket on the fuel tank, then bounced off a strut farther down and shot into Endeavour, said John Shannon, chairman of the mission management team. The brackets hold the long fuel feed line to the tank, and the struts connect the tank to the shuttle for launch. Ice tends to form near these brackets and cause the foam to pop off at liftoff. Foam has come loose from the brackets on previous flights, Shannon said, and NASA is looking at how to redesign the apparatus to mitigate this problem. «It's a little bit of a concern to us because this seems to be something that has happened frequently,» Shannon said. Directly beneath the damage is part of the aluminum framework of the starboard wing, which would provide additional protection during re-entry, Shannon said. He called that a lucky break. Almost every mission in the 26 years of shuttle flight has ended with gouges of at least one 1 inch (2.5 centimeter) in the thermal tiles that cover the belly. In one flight, nearly 300 dings that big were recorded. The ship's belly is exposed to temperatures as high as 2,300 degrees Fahrenheit (1,260 Celsius) while passing through the Earth's atmosphere. Shuttle wings encounter even more heat, which is why the briefcase-sized foam that hit Columbia's left wing at liftoff was fatally damaging when left not repaired. Since that disaster, NASA has equipped crews with tile repair kits. Depending on the extent of the damage, astronauts can slap on protective paint, screw on a shielding panel, or squirt in filler goo. If Endeavour had to make an emergency landing right now, NASA still would take the chance based on all the risks, Shannon said. The astronauts were woken up overnight by an alarm on a fuel cell that generates power for the shuttle. NASA said the alarm sounded because the fuel cell was able to cool down more than usual now that the shuttle is using a new system to draw power from the space station. Settings on the fuel cell's monitoring system were being changed to prevent the alarm from sounding again, officials said. Astronauts completed the mission's first spacewalk on Saturday, installing a new addition to the orbiting outpost. At least two more spacewalks are planned. NASA hopes to keep Endeavour at the space station for at least seven days and quite possibly a record 10 days as a result of the new system for drawing power from the station. Mission managers are expected to approve the extra docked days on Sunday.