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STS-102, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 09
Monday, March 12, 2001 - 7:30 a.m. CST
Leonardo, the first
of three logistics modules developed and built by the Italian Space
Agency, was affixed to a berthing port on Unity overnight as mission
specialist Andy Thomas carefully maneuvered it into place at 12:02 CST
a.m. today.
Operating Discovery’s
robotic arm, Thomas grappled the “crate” full of equipment
racks and supplies at 9:37 p.m. Sunday, lifting it out of the shuttle’s
cargo bay at 10:10 p.m. Over the course of the next two hours, he slowly
and deliberately moved the 11-ton module into place. At 12:02 a.m. today,
STS-102 Commander Jim Wetherbee commanded the latches on the station’s
Earth-facing Common Berthing Mechanism to establish a tight seal with
the Leonardo module.
The berthing of
Leonardo to Unity took slightly longer than planned while Expedition
One Commander Bill Shepherd rerouted video from the Centerline Berthing
Camera System to the television monitors on the shuttle’s aft flight
deck so that Thomas could use the view looking directly out the berthing
port at its corresponding opening on Leonardo. There also was a delay
in activating the cargo carrier while Shepherd connected a Unity-to-Destiny
power cable that provides electricity to systems inside Leonardo. Shepherd
briefly entered the Leonardo module at 5:51 a.m. to retrieve the cable.
He took it to the vestibule between the U.S. laboratory and Unity and
made the required connections. Leonardo carries more than five tons
of equipment and experiments that will be unloaded during the next few
days before it is again detached from the station and stowed aboard
Discovery to return to Earth.
The shuttle and
station crews rejoined each other at 9:15 p.m. Sunday when the hatches
separating them during the previous day’s record-setting 8-hour,
56-minute space walk were reopened. With the hatches open, Jim Voss
– the station’s newest resident after a 10:45 p.m. swap-out
with Sergei Krikalev – joined Expedition One Commander Bill Shepherd
and Expedition Two Commander Yury Usachev on board the station. Only
one more crew swap remains to complete the station’s change of
watch. Expedition One Commander Bill Shepherd will trade places with
Expedition Two Flight Engineer Susan Helms on Tuesday. The hatches were
closed once again at 5:39 a.m. today after 8 hours, 24 minutes. So far,
the hatches between the shuttle and station have been open for a total
of 10 hours, 27 minutes.
Meanwhile mission
specialists Paul Richards and Thomas, with help from Helms, checked
out the space suits they will wear for a planned 6-hour, 30-minute space
walk scheduled to begin at 10:47 p.m. Monday. Richards and Thomas will
finish up a task that was deferred from the first space walk, connecting
cables on the Lab Cradle Assembly that will be the mounting location
for the station’s robotic arm when it arrives next month. Next, they’ll
install an External Stowage Platform on the hull of Destiny and hook
up cables that will provide heater power to spare equipment that will
be stored there. They’ll place the first of such spares, a Pump and
Flow Control Subassembly that regulates ammonia coolant flow, on the
platform. The pair also will inspect the Floating Potential Probe that
is designed to measure the electrical charge on the outside of the station
but has not been providing data since being temporarily shut down for
repositioning of the station’s Soyuz escape vehicle in February.
Discovery and the
International Space Station remain in excellent condition at an altitude
of about 235 statute miles. The next Mission Control Center status report
will be issued Monday evening.
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