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INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT #00-25
3 p.m. CDT, Thursday, June 29, 2000
Mission Control Center, Houston, Texas
After a week of
comprehensive reviews by program managers on both sides of the Atlantic
Ocean, the next component of the International Space Station (ISS) is
poised for launch to provide the early living quarters for the first
permanent occupants of the orbital outpost.
The Russian Zvezda
Service Module was cleared for launch on July 12 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome
in Kazakhstan in a General Designer’s Review at RSC-Energia in
Korolev, Russia on Monday, attended by NASA and Russian space managers
and representatives of the European Space Agency, which provided the
data management system for the new module.
An operations readiness
review was completed today at the Johnson Space Center in Houston with Russian space officials participating by videoconference, certifying
the readiness of the module and U.S. and Russian flight control teams
for the launch, currently scheduled at around 12:56 a.m. Eastern time
on July 12 (4:56 GMT on July 12, 11:56 p.m. Central time on July 11)
atop a modified Russian Proton rocket. A firm launch time will be set
next week by Russian flight controllers following a final review of
Service Module systems in Baikonur.
The July 12 launch
is contingent on the successful launch July 5 of a second modified Proton
from Baikonur, to place a Russian military communications satellite
into orbit. Within a few hours of that launch, Zvezda will be fueled
in a special facility at Baikonur and transported by railcar to the
hangar housing its Proton rocket. Zvezda is scheduled to be mated to
the Proton on July 6 and will be transported to Launch Pad 23 July 7
for final preparations.
U.S. and Russian
flight controllers, meanwhile, continue to refine procedures and plans
for the verification of the health of Zvezda’s systems on orbit
during the two-week free flight checkout planned for the module prior
to the linkup of the ISS with Zvezda. The automatic rendezvous system
on the ISS’ Zarya module and a nearly identical system on Zvezda
will be tested to insure that they will be able to provide navigational
data to one another on the distance between the two space craft and
the rate of closure during the final phase of rendezvous and docking.
Other key systems, including Zvezda’s motion control system, its
solar arrays and its various telemetry hardware will be checked out
prior to docking as well.
Within 72 hours
after Zvezda is joined to the ISS, flight controllers will reconfigure
the data processing path between the Service Module, Zarya and the Unity
module, as Zvezda assumes control for the orientation of the Station,
any reboost which may be required and primary communication responsibility.
Otherwise, the
Station continues to operate well and flight controllers are not working
any significant technical issues. The International Space Station is
in an orbit with a high point of 245 statute miles and a low point of
230 statute miles (394 x 371 kilometers), circling the Earth every 92
minutes.
NOTE: The next
Mission Control Center ISS Status Report regarding on-orbit activities
will be issued July 6. 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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