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INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT #00-15
Noon CDT, Thursday, April 13, 2000
Mission Control Center, Houston, Texas
The International Space Station continues to be monitored by flight
controllers in Houston and Moscow, with no major systems problems. Attention
soon will turn toward preparations for the arrival of the Space Shuttle
Atlantis bringing life-extension components while awaiting the launch
of the next module in the assembly sequence - the Zvezda service module.
Atlantis’
STS-101 mission remains scheduled for launch at about 4:15 p.m. Eastern
time on April 24 with the mission’s major goals to accomplish the
complete restoration of the electrical power system on the Zarya module
and raising the Station’s altitude in preparation for Zvezda’s
arrival in late July.
Workers at the
Kennedy Space Center in Florida have completed a swap-out of the power
drive unit on the orbiter and will spend the next few days completing
retests to verify the borrowed unit from Columbia is in good working
order. At present there is no anticipated schedule impact to the April
24 launch.
Meanwhile, halfway
around the world in Russia and Kazakhstan, work continues in preparation
for Zvezda’s launch atop a Proton launch vehicle. The Proton that
will carry Zvezda into space currently is being assembled at its manufacturing
plant at the Krunichev Space Center in Moscow. Its assembly is scheduled
to be completed in mid May with delivery to the Baikonur Cosmodrome
scheduled about two weeks later.
Awaiting the Proton’s
arrival at the launch site is the Zvezda service module, which will
house life support systems, serve as the living quarters, and provide
the ISS with command and control and reboost capability through the
early assembly sequence. Zvezda’s launch remains targeted to occur
between July 8 and 14.
STS-101 will be
commanded by Jim Halsell and piloted by Scott Horowitz. Joining them
are Mission Specialists Mary Ellen Weber, Jeff Williams, Jim Voss, Susan
Helms and Yuri Usachev. The seven-member crew will undergo their final
physicals and wrap up training activities at the Johnson Space Center, Houston, this week prior to entering quarantine on Monday. The crew
will fly to Florida next Friday, April 21, for the final three days
of preparations prior to launch.
The current orbit
of the ISS is 231 by 214 miles (372 x 344 kilometers). The average decay
of the Station’s orbit is about 1-1½ miles per week. While
docked, Atlantis’ reaction control system thrusters will be used
to raise the orbit of the station by as much as 19 miles (about 30 kilometers).
The actual orbit raising distance is calculated to ‘place’
the ISS at an altitude conducive to the rendezvous with Zvezda in late
July. As of midday today, the station has circled the Earth more than
7,970 times since November 1998.
NOTE: The next
Mission Control Center ISS Status Report regarding on-orbit activities
will be issued on Thursday, April 20, unless mission events warrant.
For further information, please contact the NASA Public Affairs Office
at the Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, 281-483-5111.
-END-
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