Shuttle Atlantis roared into space Saturday soaring toward the International Space Station for the first construction mission since the 2003 Columbia tragedy.
The shuttle blasted off in a cloud of white smoke and reached orbit about nine minutes later with six astronauts aboard and a cargo containing two huge solar panels to generate more power for the ISS.
Film of the launch seen on CNN television showed fragments of apparent insulation foam breaking off the shuttle fuel tanks during the launch, but NASA did not immediately comment about whether they expected any problems from foam fragment damage.
The foam shedding during launch has troubled the past several shuttle missions and contributed to the long delay in undertaking missions for ISS construction.
Atlantis's two rocket boosters successfully separated from the orbiter two minutes after blasting off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, and the shuttle later jettisoned its massive external fuel tank.
After settling into orbit 225 kilometers (140 miles) above the Earth, the shuttle lit two small motors designed to help maneuver it into a path that will take it to a 350 kilometer- (218 miles) high orbit and the ISS, where it is expected to dock Monday at 6:46 am (1046 GMT).
The flight was delayed five times during the last two weeks due first to a lightning strike and a looming tropical storm, and then by technical glitches. It was first supposed to launch on August 27, and if Saturday's launch hadn't taken place, NASA would have had to wait until late October to get the mission off the ground.