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STS-106, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 21 Monday, September
18, 2000 - 3:30 a.m. CDT
Atlantis’
seven astronauts and cosmonauts successfully undocked from the International
Space Station after accomplishing all mission objectives in outfitting
the station for the first resident crew.
“We laid out
the red carpet for the first crew to come aboard,” said Bob Cabana,
manager of international operations for the International Space Station
Program.
Undocking occurred
at 10:46 p.m. CDT Sunday over Russia near the northeastern portion of
the Ukraine. When Atlantis was at a safe distance from the station,
about 450 feet, Pilot Scott Altman performed a 90-minute, double-loop
fly around to enable the crew to document the station’s exterior.
He fired Atlantis’ jets one final time to separate from the station
at 12:35 a.m.
“It glistened
out there in the different sunlight, watching the sunrise and sunset.
The way it illuminated the solar arrays on the service module was just
phenomenal,” Altman said, when asked about the fly around during
a crew news conference early Monday. “It sparkled like a jewel
against the blue background of the oceans.”
Commander Terry
Wilcutt, Altman and Mission Specialists Ed Lu, Rick Mastracchio, Dan
Burbank, Yuri Malenchenko and Boris Morukov all answered questions posed
by reporters at NASA centers and the Russian mission control center
outside of Moscow.
Wilcutt said he
had no advice for the first station residents – Bill Shepherd,
Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko -- other than to “enjoy it like
a new home.” When asked about living conditions aboard the station,
in particular noise levels inside the Zvezda service module, he said
“We all think it’s just fine. No louder than the shuttle.
It’s just fine the way it is.”
Following the in-flight
press conference, Malenchenko and Morukov remained in Atlantis’
middeck to field questions from Russian reporters in Moscow before enjoying
six hours of off-duty time and an eight-hour sleep period.
When the astronauts
are awakened at 5:46 p.m. CDT this afternoon, they will check out the
shuttle systems used for reentry and landing and secure equipment and
transfer items in preparation for their homecoming. Landing is scheduled
for 2:56 a.m. CDT Wednesday at Kennedy Space Center.
The next mission
status report will be issued about 7 p.m. Monday or sooner if events
warrant.
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