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INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT #00-13 Noon CST,
Thursday, March 30, 2000
Mission Control Center, Houston, Texas
The next space shuttle visit to the International Space Station has
been set to begin at about 4:15 p.m. Eastern time on April 24 to perform
life-extension maintenance tasks on the Zarya module, and to deliver
supplies to the inside and outside of the station for use by future
crews.
A launch on April
24 will see Atlantis – fresh off a year-and-a-half of refurbishment
and maintenance – dock two days later to an orbiting space station
for the first time since it arrived at the Russian Mir space station
on STS-86 in September 1997. The orbiter and its external fuel tank/solid
rocket booster stack was moved to the launch pad last Saturday and the
Spacehab double module was installed into the payload bay earlier this
week. A countdown test that includes the seven astronauts will be conducted
next Thursday and Friday at the Kennedy Space Center to mirror the events
that will take place on launch day.
Atlantis’
STS-101 mission not only provides an early look by three of its crew
members at their future home, but also sets the stage for the arrival
of the Zvezda service module set to launch on a Russian Proton rocket
in mid July from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Susan Helms,
Jim Voss and cosmonaut Yuri Usachev will oversee maintenance tasks to
restore the Zarya module’s electrical power system to full capacity.
The three crew
members were added to this mission for their unique abilities to step
in on short notice to accomplish tasks for which they have already been
training as the second crew to live alone next year on the ISS. Voss
will join fellow crew member Jeff Williams in a space walk to replace
a malfunctioning antenna on the Unity module and deliver additional
components of a Russian crane to the outside of the station. The two
astronauts also will check the current location of a small U.S. crane
to ensure it is seated properly in its housing.
On orbit, the two
components making up the International Space Station continue to operate
in good health with electrical power management serving as the primary
focus of flight controller attention. Zarya’s automatic docking
system that will be used to rendezvous and dock with Zvezda has been
verified to be in good working condition following several tests over
the course of the last few months. Kurs, as it’s called, has two
redundant systems and plans are being finalized as to which will serve
as primary for the rendezvous and docking phase. Specific procedures
are being developed as to the management of the station’s power
and communications systems during the final stages of the docking activities.
Earlier today in
the California desert, an experimental spacecraft that is being considered
for use as an emergency crew return vehicle from the ISS was tested
for the fourth time. The X-38 was dropped from the wing of NASA’s
B-52 and touched down under the shadow of a huge parafoil. The next
test of the craft at NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center is scheduled
this summer.
The ISS continues
to operate with no major systems failures as it circles the Earth every
92 minutes in an orbit of 232 by 217 miles. The station has completed
more than 7,760 orbits since Zarya was launched in November 1998.
NOTE: The next
Mission Control Center ISS Status Report regarding on-orbit activities
will be issued on Thursday, April 6, unless mission events warrant.
For further information, please contact the NASA Public Affairs Office
at the Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, 281-483-5111.
NASA Johnson Space Center Shuttle Mission/Space Station Status Reports and other information
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