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STS-104, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 26
Tuesday, July 24, 2001 - 6 p.m. CDT
"Hold Back
the Rain" by Duran Duran was the wakeup song for Atlantis crewmembers
about 2:30 p.m. CDT Tuesday. Houston's Mission Control Center told the
astronauts that the weather appears to be excellent for a landing late
tonight to wrap up their 13-day mission.
The forecast for
Kennedy Space Center calls for a few scattered clouds and no rain for
both landing opportunities this evening.
Atlantis Commander
Steve Lindsey, Pilot Charlie Hobaugh and Mission Specialists Janet Kavandi,
Mike Gernhardt and Jim Reilly began final deorbit preparations around
5:40 p.m. for the first landing opportunity at KSC. Atlantis' payload
bay doors are to be closed at 6:52 p.m. Crewmembers will climb into
their seats just after 8:30 p.m. Atlantis' orbital maneuvering system
engines will begin firing at 9:32 p.m. to drop the shuttle out of orbit
for a 10:39 p.m. CDT landing at KSC on the 3-mile-long Shuttle Landing
Facility runway.
A second landing
opportunity at KSC would see a deorbit burn at 11:08 p.m. and touchdown
at 12:15 a.m. Wednesday.
Aboard the International
Space Station, the Expedition Two crew, Commander Yury Usachev and Flight
Engineers Susan Helms and Jim Voss, will be awakened just before midnight
to resume their full work schedule after two light days of activity.
Flight controllers in Moscow successfully performed the fourth of five
scheduled orbital adjustment burns using jet thrusters on the Progress
supply vehicle docked at the rear of the Service Module Tuesday afternoon.
The maneuvers are designed to optimize the station's orbit for the arrival
of the next Progress vehicle in August and the Russian Docking Compartment
in September.
Both spacecraft
are in excellent condition, orbiting at an average altitude of about
240 statute miles.
The next mission
status report will be issued after landing or as events warrant.
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