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STS-101, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 01
Friday, May 19, 2000 - 6:00 a.m. CDT
With dawn's first
light glimmering above, six American astronauts and one Russian cosmonaut
blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center to pay a "home improvement"
house call on the fledgling International Space Station.
Riding aboard the
upgraded and refurbished space Shuttle Atlantis, Commander Jim Halsell,
Pilot Scott Horowitz and Mission Specialists Mary Ellen Weber, Jeff
Williams, Jim Voss, Susan Helms and Yury Usachev rocketed away from
their Florida launch site at 5:11 a.m. Central time, a pre-dawn launch
by Shuttle standards. Atlantis quickly rose into daylight as it raced
up the Eastern seaboard in pursuit of the 76-foot long, 35-ton international
station, which was flying over the Ukraine, southwest of Kiev.
The launch was
Atlantis' first since September 1997. Atlantis recently underwent major
modifications, including the introduction of a state-of-the-art, hi-tech
glass cockpit filled with computer displays to replace the old cockpit
dials and switches.
Atlantis launched
on time after three delays last month caused by high winds at the launch
site and at overseas emergency landing strips. Today, conditions were
perfect. Atlantis is scheduled to link up to the space station at 11:31
p.m. Central time Saturday night (12:31 a.m. Eastern time Sunday morning).
Once on orbit,
Atlantis' crew began to set up shuttle systems for the planned 10-day
mission, preparing to open the ship's cargo bay doors, which will be
followed by the activation of the double Spacehab module housed in the
rear of the cargo bay, containing more than a ton of supplies the crew
will transfer to the station.
The astronauts
will begin their first eight-hour sleep period just five hours after
liftoff, at 10:11 a.m. Central time, and will be awakened at 6:11 p.m.
this evening to begin their first full day in orbit. Prior to the start
of that sleep period, Halsell and Horowitz will fire Atlantis' maneuvering
jets in the first of a series of maneuvers designed to put the shuttle
on a precise course to the International Space Station.
After the first
rendezvous maneuver, Atlantis will be circling the Earth in a slightly
elliptical orbit of about 201 by 124 statute miles, inclined 51.6 degrees
to either side of the equator.
The next STS-101
status report will be issued at around 7:00 p.m. Central time Friday
unless developments warrant.
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