Preflight
Interview: Joe Tanner
The
STS-97 Crew Interviews with Joe Tanner, Mission Specialist.
Q:
Joe, let's start with a couple of personal questions: tell me,
why did you want to become an astronaut?
A. I guess
I've wanted to become an astronaut since I was eleven years old
and Alan Shepard took his first flight into space, and I looked
at that as the ultimate human adventure. And always having been
an adventurer, I strive to do that myself.
Fill
that in for me—at eleven years old how had you always been an
adventurer?
Well, I was
interested in exploring, of course; I think most 11-year-olds
probably are. And when I lived out in the country, and we had
free rein to explore a hundred-and-twenty-five acres of land and…I
had four brothers-I have four brothers-and we'd go out on adventures
and spend all afternoon out building a fort or just, you know,
playing games out on the land so it's in my family…I think we're
all adventurers at heart, got it from our parents, most likely,
and the next step seemed to be, you know, to fly airplanes, and
I did that in the Navy. And then the ultimate aviation job in
my opinion was to fly in space, so I pursued that.
In
fact, you came to work at NASA before you became an astronaut.
That's right.
I came here in 1984 as an instructor pilot, research pilot, at
Aircraft Operations Division here at Johnson Space Center, and I worked there for exactly eight years before I got selected as
an astronaut.
There's
a wide variety of backgrounds among the people inside the Astronaut
Office. Give me a sense of yours, and your academic background
and your job history, your career path that got you here.
Well, my
career path is a little bit different than many. I had a time
where I was out of aviation, when I lived in Colorado for about
four years and did some different things. I guess that helped
me put my life in perspective a little bit and helped me to define
what I wanted to do-really wanted to do-for a living and for a
career. So, I'm a little bit different than the people who stayed
focused that whole time. I think everybody has a time in their
lives when maybe they lose focus a little bit, but I retired,
I guess, a little bit early for a couple of years, but then I
came here in 1984. So my career path is a little bit different;
academically I'm not quite as qualified as most of the people
in the Office; I guess I have to rely on my job experience.
It's
an example of the fact that a list of degrees as long as your
arm is not absolutely necessary to be an astronaut.
Well, I guess
it's not absolutely necessary; certainly good to have, and I would
certainly encourage anyone who wants to be an astronaut to achieve
academically as much as they can. But I guess I'm an example that
a few people slip through the cracks here and can make it into
the Astronaut Office, you know, on their work experience and history.
As
you look back at your own life, are there certain people that
you can identify and say, these were the people who were really
significant influences in decisions that I made and the things
that happened that got me to where I am?
Well, I think,
of course, the most influential people in my life have been my
family: my parents, you know, my brothers, and now my wife and
my children, and I rely on them for support, and they've always
been supportive. My parents never pushed any of their children
into any one area, but we always knew that anything that we wanted
to try to do we had their support-total support. So, I'd have
to say that is where my major support comes from, and of course,
my major support right now is from my wife and my children.
[They're]
pretty excited about the mission that you're about to fly?
Well, this
particular mission being my third, lacks some of the drama of
the first, and maybe even the second because my second mission
was going to be my first EVA or space walk. The time between the
second and the third is approaching four years now, and so I think
particularly my children have matured and they take it a little
bit more, with a cavalier attitude than they did for the first
one.
Unlike
some of the recent shuttle crews, you and your crewmates on STS-97
have had more than two years to train together for this mission.
What has that been like? Has it been hard to keep focused and
concentrated as your goal-your launch date-has moved away from
you a few times?
Well, actually,
Carlos and I have been training together, or working together
I suppose is a better word, on this mission for three-and-a-half
years. The EVA crews on the first seven missions were named quite
early so that we could work the hardware issues that came up,
and there were numerous issues to work. So we've been together
for a long time. And I have to say that, you know, it's been enjoyable.
Now we weren't devoting 100% of our time to this mission for three-and-a-half
years; we both had other jobs…as a matter of fact, I was working
and he was working in another job until just a little over a year
ago when we devoted ourselves full-time to training. But it has
been a little bit difficult as the launch date kept changing and
we knew when we were assigned that the date would probably change.
And, we have a record of it on our board-I think we're up to our
eleventh launch date for the same mission! But, we know that this
is a tremendously challenging effort that this agency is undertaking,
and so we don't let it get us down that the date keeps changing.
We're just going to hang in there until we get to do the mission.
And we're thankful that it's approaching.
Let's
talk about the mission. Start by summarizing for us the goals
of STS-97. What is this mission going to do? What's the significance
of the new hardware that you folks are bringing to the International
Space Station?
Well, we
are bringing the electrical power to the station and the station
already has life support, if you want to call it that, from the
solar arrays on the FGB and the Service Module, but there's not
enough excess power, really, to power the Unity, the Node. We're
bringing up power for the rest of the station that's coming after
us, particularly the U.S. Lab module, Destiny. And without that
power, the module would be dead…so we feel like our mission is
critical in the assembly sequence to bring the power to the station.
OK,
before we discuss the sequence of events of what you're going
to do during the mission, let's get familiar with the hardware
in question. The P6 Integrated Truss Structure…which we've found
is not easy to say…could you describe the payload for us and the
various components of the hardware?
Certainly.
P actually stands for "port" as opposed to starboard which means
it ends up on the left side of the station. 6 is a number in numerical
sequence, as opposed to 4, which is the module, the photovoltaic
module, that's going to be closer to the center of the station,
and there's a 4 and a 6 on the starboard side also. So, that's
why it's called P6. The most visible element of it will be the
solar arrays, and they are huge- full wingspan when deployed,
in the neighborhood of 240 feet; they're eighteen feet wide, the
pair of them, and they're just gigantic. And they will increase
the brightness of the station-as a matter of fact, we just learned
the other day-to be the third brightest star in the heavens as
it goes over. So, the appearance will change dramatically once
we have deployed the arrays. The whole purpose for the arrays,
of course, is to collect the sun's energy, and then the structure
itself converts that energy into electrical power. We charge batteries;
there are twelve batteries on board. There are units that control
the charge or the discharge of those batteries-of course, during
the daylight hours, the batteries will charge, and of course we
have to go through a nighttime cycle on every orbit. During that
cycle you can't collect solar energy so the batteries discharge
and provide a constant stream of power to the station. And there
are other boxes that control that switching between charging and
discharging. There are boxes that convert the high-voltage, 160-volt,
electrical power that the solar arrays collect into more usable
convertible power of 123 volts or so, and then there are wires
that feed the power into the Z1 structure that we're bolted onto,
and then subsequently into the station. We also have, because
the boxes generate heat as they operate, we have a photovoltaic
solar array to reject that heat into space. And then, we also
have two more radiators that aren't going to be used-they'll be
functional but not used for anything after our mission-but they
will reject the heat loads that are generated by the Lab when
it comes up on 5A.
Is
it right to think of this in the sense that the addition of all
of this hardware, once the Lab comes up, allows the station to
continue to be electrically self-sufficient?
Well, that's
certainly true. And if we are able to generate, you know, the
full potential output of the arrays, the station will be able
to stand on its own and you know, carry it through the nighttime
passes without any concern for the amount of electrical power
that you're using. You know, here on [Earth], we plug into the
outlet and we just assume the power's going to be there. In space,
you know, you have to plan ahead and guarantee, of course, there's
not going to be any cloudy days, but if for some reason the station
had an attitude problem and you couldn't point the arrays right
at the sun, you may have to sustain an orbit where you don't get
full power generation. You need to have the capability, you know,
that little surge capability, if you will, to cover those periods
of times, and that's why the batteries are robust and are able
to make up that difference even if you do have a bad pass. But,
the station will stand on its own and be able to sustain its own
power systems, by the time we leave.
Of
course a big step in the success of this flight is bringing Endeavour
and the International Space Station together on orbit. And on
your mission, the shuttle is going to be approaching the station
differently than previous shuttle missions have approached this
space station; you're also going to be docking to an entirely
new place. Talk us through what happens on rendezvous day, and
give me your "bird's-eye" view of what's going to be going on
as you describe what you're going to be doing while Brent Jett
flies the orbiter up to the station.
Well, the
rendezvous day starts with a bang—we get up and immediately go
into the rendezvous timeline, and the rendezvous timeline has
to be followed precisely because you have to do certain maneuvers,
certain attitude burns or propulsion burns at specific times during
the rendezvous so that you catch up to the station, and we're
in a process of catching up from the moment we launch. The burns
are designed to get us to exactly the right point in space below
the station at exactly the right time so that we hopefully perform
our docking over a Russian ground site, so we'll be over Russia
someplace. During this whole time, you know, mostly Brent and
Mike Bloomfield and Marc Garneau are very active in following
the rendezvous and running the rendezvous checklist; Carlos and
I have other duties, you know. Carlos is working with the computer
program that is displaying the rendezvous. I'm not terribly involved
initially until we get within sight of the station-at that point
my job is one of the best because I just take pictures of it until
we get inside about fifty feet. At that point Carlos and I work
together to determine if our attitude is correct for the docking
and recommend suggestions to Mike to adjust the attitude. And,
historically, we haven't had to do that so, hopefully, we'll just
be verifying that we're in good attitude. From thirty feet on
in, Brent will be flying the approach precisely with help from
the rest of the crew, and my job now is to monitor the docking
system, for any anomalies that might affect our ability to dock.
As soon as we dock, Marc and I get very busy monitoring the activities
of the docking system and assuring that we are hard-docked and
then assuring that all the hooks close and that we have a good
seal between us and the station. So, I'm not very busy initially;
very busy right after docking.
We
mentioned that you're going to be docking to a piece of hardware
delivered by the STS-92 crew; that's going to be a first. Another
first is that this is going to be the first docking to the station
when there's already a crew on board the station-Bill Shepherd,
Yuri Gidzenko, and Sergei Krikalev. Any thoughts, on your part,
of the historic significance of this first on-orbit interaction
between shuttle and ISS station crews?
Well, we're
pretty excited about having the crew there; you know, it'll be
more interesting to us, of course, to go to the station when somebody's
on board. The fact that these three men are good friends of ours
makes it even more special. But, when we first were assigned to
the mission there was not going to be a crew, and we were very
glad, you know, when the crew was going to be there before us
later on because it does add a little bit more excitement to the
mission-of course certainly more media interest-in the mission,
and I think we all want to see the public excited about our space
program and that certainly helps, but I think being able to approach
this station and look at it and know that somebody's up there.
Somebody's in that and they're watching us come and I know that
they'll probably be glad to see us, just as we'll be glad to see
them. So, I think it makes it more interesting and more exciting
with them there.
And
yet during most of the time that the shuttle is going to be docked
to the station on this mission, the hatches between the two vessels
are going to remain closed; can you explain the reason behind
that?
Well, the
real reason has to do with the space walks…the EVAs. We need to
depress the atmospheric pressure in the shuttle down to 10.2 pounds
per square inch, and of course normally we're at 14.7; the station
is always at 14.7. If we stayed at 14.7, Carlos and I would have
to do a pre-breathe in our suits before the space walk that would
be four hours long; well, that would just kind of blow your whole
day. If we depress at least twenty-four hours prior to the EVA
to 10.2, then we only have to pre-breathe for forty minutes. So
you can see the huge advantage of being at 10.2 psi versus 14.7.
So we'll do that. [We'll] depress actually about thirty-six hours
prior to the EVA, and that means that we cannot open the hatch
between the station and the shuttle until after the EVAs are complete,
when we can safely go back up to 14.7, when Carlos and I aren't
going to be doing any more EVAs. So that's the reason.
Just
a short time after you folks dock to the station, some of your
crewmates are going to start work with your primary payload, to
lift it out of the payload bay, where it'll stay overnight. Would
you describe what happens there, and why it's done?
Well, we
are very concerned about the temperature and the stabilized temperature
of the payload, and in order to make sure it stays at a temperature
that it can not get too hot and not to get too cold, we have to
pull it out of the payload bay and put it in the position known
as, I guess we call it overnight park, where we can guarantee
its thermal stabilization. And so Marc and Mike-we may slip and
call Mike "Bloomer" sometimes, by the way, you're probably going
to hear it…his last name is Bloomfield and so we call him Bloomer
a lot and you'll hear that on the radio-but they will work together
to unberth P6, and this is very challenging because the clearances
are extremely tight. Marc will be doing the majority of the arm
work at this point, and you can't lift P6 straight up because
if you did it would hit the station on the way out, and you don't
want to do that so he has to go through some maneuvers to get
it clear of the station and clear of the orbiter tail and then
lift it up and put it in this "parked" position. So, this is a
maneuver that they're going to be doing, you know, shortly after
we dock and before we go to bed-it's a very packed timeline in
the EVA, or the rendezvous day is extremely tight from start to
finish. And we're going to be, I think, ready for bed after the
end of that day!
Because
the next day is the day that you and Carlos are scheduled for
the first of the mission's two planned space walks. First of all,
you made two space walks on your last flight-you referred to the
Hubble Space Telescope; how does the experience of having done
space walks help prepare you and, perhaps, your crewmates for
the job of this mission's space walks?
I think experience
in doing anything is critical: I think most people will always
do a better job the second time they try just about anything.
And, having already done two space walks and then having, unfortunately,
almost four years to think about what you did, I think helps because
you look at the tasks that you're asked to do on this mission
with a slightly different slant. You know, the difference between
water, you know, being in the Neutral Buoyancy Lab tank, we practice
under water; you know how that feels versus how that same activity
would feel in space, you know what works and what doesn't work
so well, and you know what to expect. I think knowing what to
expect when you stick your head out of the hatch really, really
helps. I know my second launch was a whole lot less stressful
than the first because I knew what to expect, I knew what changes
my body was going to go through, so having that experience has
been real valuable. I've tried to pass as much of that on to Carlos
as I can. He's flown before, but he hasn't done an EVA before,
and hopefully, you know, my experience will help him just a little
bit, too.
OK.
Let's get to what I'm perhaps assuming-hopefully correctly-is
one of the highlights of the mission for you, the first of these
space walks. Take us out in the payload bay with you and describe
the steps, the tasks that are on the schedule for you and Carlos
on the first of these two space walks.
Well, the
first EVA is obviously critical to our mission; every task on
the first EVA is a required task that we have to do to say that
we've had a successful mission. The first and most critical task,
of course, is to physically secure P6 to Z1; you know, if we can't
do that then we've either got to bring it home or throw it away,
and we don't want to do either one of those. The first task is
to make sure that P6 is in its pre-mate position, and we work
together with Marc and Bloomer, and then Carlos and I are out
there to make sure that the optical system that they are using
to guide P6 onto Z1 is working and functioning correctly. And
we actually even tell them when to stop, when they bring it down.
And this will be an exciting moment because, you know, this is
adding the next building block on top of the station, and it will
be, you know, very exciting for us. We've trained for that quite
a bit in the Virtual Reality Lab and some in the pool, but mostly
in the VR lab. So when we get it down and close enough and we
tell them to stop, then Carlos will drive a mechanical latch that
will pull them together tight and have a little bit of a pre-load
even on the connections. And then we secure four bolts…they're
fairly good-sized bolts. Carlos does two, I do two, and when we
are successful in getting those fully torqued then P6 is one with
the station, but it's not electrically connected, and so the next
series of activities involves making the electrical connections,
and Carlos will do that. Simultaneous with his activities, I'll
be preparing the solar arrays for deployment. And there are pretty
hefty locks that are attached to the blanket boxes to hold them
in place during launch. I have to remove those. By this time Carlos
is done with his tasks, and he comes up and deploys one solar
array, and I'll deploy the other one. And then, perhaps one of
the most dramatic events of the mission is when each of us, in
turn-he goes first and then me-climb up to the top, the very top
of P6, on top of one of the canisters, and swing the blanket boxes
out. They have to swing out 90° each, and it's a totally manual
task, and there's no motorized backup or anything-if we aren't
strong enough then we aren't strong enough, although we don't
think it's going to be that difficult. So, individually we swing
these blanket boxes out and secure them in position and then we'll
call the crew module and say, you know, the arrays are ready to
deploy. And, if the commanding goes well on the ground and in
the crew module, then hopefully we'll be actually [on the] EVA
while the solar arrays are deploying. And they'll deploy one at
a time. And that's going to be really dramatic.
Are
you still going to be on the top of P6 as they start to push out?
Well, there
is a chance that I could still be on top when the first array
goes out because we have to do these in sequential order. Carlos
is, in the timeline, is there first so there is a possibility
that I could be, you know, actually on top of my canister while
the other array is deploying. I hope!
With
a camera?
With a camera.
And since you mentioned camera, we're going to be the first flight
of the wireless video system. We've had an EVA cam before, many,
many years ago, but this is an improvement over that. It's a new
system and I think it's going to be exceptional. We'll have three
focal length cameras mounted on our helmets; it's, you know, it's
much like the camera in the race cars, and I guess they have the
"referee cam" now at the NFL football games, but, it's going to
be very much like that. We'll have a wide-angle lens, a 3.5mm
lens, a 6mm lens, and a 12mm lens that we can choose from. Actually,
the guys in the crew module will select the lens. But if there's
live downlink, at that time, the people on the ground are going
to see exactly what we see, and so my view will be your view and
I think it's going to be spectacular!
I
take it then that as the arrays begin to deploy, you and Carlos
are done and head back inside?
Yes, we have
a little bit more activity to prepare the photovoltaic radiator
for deployment; we don't anticipate being outside when it deploys
but we have to release the launch locks and pull a couple of pins
on it; about thirty minutes worth of activity, and that completes
the first day's worth of work, unless we're way ahead, which I
seriously doubt we will be, but because it's a very full day,
we might try to, you know, fit in a couple of small tasks before
we come in.
While
you are outside-and we understand about the support you're getting
from inside the shuttle-what's the Expedition 1 crew doing?
Well, they
are, of course, watching what we are doing. There's more activity
required for them on the second EVA day than the first. Mostly
on the first, they're just watching and probably worrying about
what we're doing. I don't know how good their view is going to
be; we'll try to keep them informed of our progress. And they
have been trained, actually, to do a number of the tasks that
we could potentially leave undone. For instance, the bolts that
secure P6 to Z1-referred to as RTA, or Rocketdyne Truss Attachment
System-they are trained to finish up any of these activities that
we may not finish if for some really remote reason we would have
to leave halfway through that task. And everything else that's
on our EVA timeline, they have also been trained to do.
You
made reference to the fact that there's always the possibility
that something may not go exactly the way it's been planned; despite
all the planning and the hard work, it's always a possibility.
What are the real critical failure scenarios that are involved
here, and also, tell me how you and your crewmates have trained
to respond to them?
We've been
thinking about what could go wrong for three-and-a-half years,
and I fully anticipate that all of the mechanical deployments
will go just fine. But you can't not have backups. So, the first
thing that could go wrong, of course, is the RTA's attachment
system doesn't work right; we have a series of troubleshooting
steps to go through, and we have backup bolts in case the primary
ones don't work. If for some reason we couldn't get the launch
restraints off-you know, that would be bad, because we can't deploy
the solar arrays with the launch restraints still in place-we
have ways to help get those off, and we've worked very hard with
the Boeing engineers to develop a good system that we're sure
that we can get off, and I'm very confident that we can get it
off. I wasn't at one point, but I am now. The solar array, the
canister deployment…that's a fairly simple task; we do know that
we may have to help it along just a little bit-there's a spring
that causes the beta gimbal assembly to deploy, but we're not
sure it's going to be strong enough, especially if the temperatures
are cold. And we have other plans, if, you know, if it doesn't
lock completely in place, we have other plans to handle that contingency.
We've done a lot of work on the blanket boxes-they have to unlatch
successfully, and if they don't you can't deploy the arrays, and
everyone's worked real hard-the whole team has worked real hard-to
work on contingency approaches to that malfunction. Once again,
I think everything's going to work just fine.
After
the first space walk there's a day with no space walks, but still
a lot of work to be done inside the space shuttle. What's on the
schedule that day? What are you going to be busy with?
Well, the
first half of the day is involved with a test…261, I believe,
is the number, and that primarily involves, Mike and Marc's doing
some of the documentation and Brent, firing thrusters and watching
the dynamics of the stack of the P6 and the solar arrays to see
what impact a thruster firing has. And this is a critical activity
for control of the station using the shuttle, and also what we
think the impacts are of docking loads and so forth are going
to be on the station. And the whole morning is taken up with that.
Carlos and I will be preparing our tools and doing some minor
work on our suits, in preparation for the next day, and then we
get a little bit of relax time, even in the afternoon; and then
by late afternoon we'll start preparing, mentally, for the next
day's EVAs. We have a tag-up the night before each of the EVAs,
where the whole crew will sit down, so to speak, together and
go over every aspect of the day's activities ahead.
Let's
move on then to the next day's activities—the second space walk,
involving connecting up power supplies and configuring [the] communications
system, helping set the stage for the missions that [are] going
to come. Once again, talk us through the events of the second
space walk.
OK. We're
going to switch roles a little bit on the second EVA. On the first
EVA I'm going to go out first and Carlos will come out second;
on the second EVA day we'll switch that and he'll go out first-
you know, on his next mission he's going to be the lead EVA person
and I felt like he should have the experience of doing all those
activities, you know, once before he has to do it, as the lead.
So he'll go out first and configure the safety tethers for him
and for me, and then…on the first day he rode the arm, on the
second day I'm going to ride the arm for a part of the time. And,
the major activities are configuring; the most critical activity
probably is configuring the Z1-we call it a patch panel- so that
the electrical power that's generated by the solar arrays can
actually get into the Node. Prior to this reconfiguration we can
generate electricity but it's not plumbed, if you will, to get
into the Node, so Carlos will be making those connections, you
know, while I'm preparing the arm so that I can ride on it. The
next, major task is to move the S-band antenna from its stowage
location on Z1 to the very top of P6. This is farther than we
can reach with the arm- almost twice as far, as a matter of fact-and
so, I will carry it as far as I can, and then I hand it off to
Carlos and then I get out of the arm, you know, spin him around
in his foot restraint, and then get into a foot restraint myself,
receive it from him and then we'll install it, and then make the
electrical connections. At this point then, you know, we'll give
the guys in the crew module the call which will, in turn, go down
to the ground that says the S-band antenna is ready to be powered
up, and we'll go through some self-checks then to make sure its
electrical connections are good. And then we do some preparations
for the next mission-our friends on 5A crew-preparing the PMA-2
for removal. The 5A crew will de-mate PMA-2 from the Node and
temporarily stow it on Z1, so that they can put the Lab on that
same port, and then they will take the PMA-2 off of Z1 and put
it on the end of the Lab. Well, we have to prepare the cables,
we de-mate the connections that the 2A crew made between PMA-2
and the Node, and we stow them back into their launch configuration.
And we do a few other smaller items. We connect the camera cable
that will allow the centerline berthing system to work so that
Marsha Ivins, when she's docking the Lab to the Node, can look
through the window in the hatch on the forward side of the Node
and actually see the Lab come in and judge her alignment with
that centerline berthing camera. A real critical step for the
Lab is one that I do next that connects the fluid lines-the cooling
lines…it's actually ammonia- between Z1 and P6. And that allows
the radiators-the two extra radiators that are on the P6 module-to
flow ammonia that will allow the Lab to control its temperatures.
So these are critical connections; there's four of them. The lines
are pressurized to 250 psi and the connectors are fairly complex
and so that has to go well. And then we finish up with some smaller
prep items: we move a foot restraint for the 5A crew, and there
are a couple [of] other items that are in the development stage
right now that may or may not make it on to our flight, so we'll
have to see how that develops. I'm not sure yet how it's going
to end up.
It's
a lot of work over six hours or so…and after you and Carlos get
back inside, get undressed and cleaned up and get some sleep comes
the big event the next day, and that's the first time both hatches
on the PMA will be opened to an inhabited station; is there anything
special we're going to see as this historic event unfolds?
Well, we're
going to try real hard to make this a live event. And we're going
to, hopefully, have cameras on both sides of the hatch, that as
soon as we have the hatch open, we'll be working so that you can
see what each group is going to be seeing. And, this will be,
you know, a challenge for us to make sure all the connections
are made in a timely manner, but we want the show to be good for
the people on the ground. We don't have anything other than, you
know, just a warm greeting planned-at least that I know of-right
now. But we think it's going to be a great reunion.
The
agenda as it stands today, as we talk, calls for two full days
of joint operations…it's all eight of you inside both vehicles.
What is going to be going on during this couple of days?
Well, I think
that first of all, we want to go in and see what the station feels
like. We want to get in there and just get the atmosphere of the
place and…I didn't get a chance to go to Mir, on my other two
flights, and Carlos and, I think, Mike and Brent have all been
there, and so I want to see what a station is like, you know,
from a personal standpoint-I want to look at very inch of it,
every cubic inch; I want to be in, just for a little bit. So a
lot of that is going to be exploring. We're going to be, you know,
allowing them to show us around. I hope that they will let us
help them with some of their housekeeping and help straighten
up the place if it needs it; I know they've got a lot of work
to do and they will have been there, you know, maybe three weeks
before we get there, so if there's anything left over, I want
to help. Try to, you know, get the place in order. We have some
transfers to complete: we'll bring over more water, we'll take
the equipment back that they are done with and put it back on
the shuttle for return to Earth, and…I think, we'll just be enjoying
their company a lot. I know there's a lot of things that are going
to come up between now and then, so we have a lot of time in there,
you know, to take care of these things that we know are going
to come up.
When
whatever happens happens, and that time is over-six docked days
together-it'll be time for you and your crewmates to leave. Describe
what happens that day, as the shuttle departs and flies around
the station and then and waves goodbye and heads off.
All right.
Well, of course, the hatch closing, and we'll try to document
that, live if at all possible as well, will be, I think, a bit
of a sad moment. Of course, you know, you really enjoy being in
space, but there's something about saying, OK the mission's over,
and hopefully we'll be successful, and there's an excitement about
coming home and seeing your friends and family, too. But, I think
the, you know, the hatch closing will be sad, because, you know,
this portion of our flight, something that we worked for so long
for, now is going to be over, and, of course, I'm sure, Shep and
Yuri and Sergei will be sad to see the company go, but, the undock
day is, you know, preparations for the undock are not particularly
strenuous, I suppose, but need to be done precisely. And we'll,
at the moment of undock, we start a flyaround maneuver and Bloomer's
going to be controlling the shuttle at this point. Marc and I
will monitor the undocking sequence; Carlos will be working with
the handheld laser, and then he and I will pick up cameras and
document every square inch of the station as we fly around it.
Then we back out to about four-hundred feet and then do a complete
circle around the station at about four-hundred feet. We have
an IMAX 3-D camera on board; we're going to try to take a very
dramatic shot of the station as it crosses the Earth limb with
the Earth, at first in the background and then as the station
breaks the Earth limb, into the black of space. So it's going
to be, you know, a beautiful sight-I just know it-with the solar
arrays out; we have our simulator pictures here that are pretty
accurate and it's beautiful in the simulator, so I know in real
life it's just going to be awesome.
STS-97
is a very important step in getting the space station ready for
science in as much as that it sets the stage for, as you've mentioned,
the arrival of the Lab on the mission that follows you. Finally,
give us some of your thoughts about what the International Space
Station offers us as a lab in space, and as a home in space, and
as a place to learn how to move off into space.
Well, I think
it's a critical next step in our research of the galaxy, if you
will. And there are a number of things that we need to learn about
long-duration space flight that we can only learn in an orbiting
laboratory. Now, the Russians have got a tremendous amount of
experience in long-duration space flight, and it's really good
that we're partnered with them so we can gain from all of the
things that they have learned. Our only real excursion prior to
this was the Skylab, and that was, you know, many years ago, and
we gathered good data, but there's more to be gathered. Just on
the human body alone, there are countless research items that
we need to do before, and answers that we need to have before
we attempt a mission to Mars. The human body may be the most critical
link in that mission, in how you're going to withstand the potentially
months of weightlessness if you can't generate an artificial gravity,
you know, which is doable but complex. So, we need to understand
how the human body behaves in weightlessness before we send somebody
off on that kind of a mission. And of course there's many Earthly
applications to the research that we do to help us…osteoporosis
patients, for instance, can benefit greatly from what we learn
from bone decalcification. The Lab and the ability to change out
experiments, you know, will allow us to do these kind of experiments,
and I could go on and on from a technical standpoint of the things
that we can do there, but the fact is now we have a platform that
is designed to do science. The Lab can operate twenty-four hours
a day if we want it to, if we want to staff it to that level and
we can, in later-on years, and we can be doing active science
for 365 days a year, twenty-four hours a day. We never had that
before, and the station will allow us to do that. And I think
we don't even know all of the research that we're going to do
yet. Things are going to do, you know, we can learn a whole lot
more if we can take this into space and leave it there for a while
and say, oh yeah, we have this laboratory; we can take it up there
and we can do that. So, I think this, you know, is the dawn of
a new era for NASA and NASA's ability to do meaningful research
in space. |