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STS-108, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 18
Friday, Dec. 14, 2001 – 6 a.m. CST
In space today,
the 10 astronauts and cosmonauts on board Endeavour and the International
Space Station, will focus their efforts on final transfer activities
and this morning’s unberthing of the Raffaello Multi-Purpose Logistics
Module to be placed back in Endeavour’s payload bay for a return
trip home.
Raffaello has been
loaded with unneeded equipment, as well as gear from the returning Expedition
Three crewmembers, including their custom Soyuz spacesuits and seat
liners. The hatch between Raffaello and the space station will be closed
about 10 a.m. CST today once final transfers are complete. About 1:20
p.m., Pilot Mark Kelly and Mission Specialist Linda Godwin will begin
the process of detaching Raffaello from the station using the shuttle’s
50-foot long robotic arm. The process of removing Raffaello from the
station and carefully placing it back in Endeavour’s payload bay
is expected to be complete shortly after 3:30 p.m.
The two station
commanders – Frank Culbertson and Yury Onufrienko – will continue
their handover briefings even as they prepare for Endeavour’s scheduled
departure Saturday morning. Expedition Three crew member Vladimir Dezhurov
will join Onufrienko in some final maintenance work on the station this
morning replacing a faulty compressor in an air conditioner unit in
the Zvezda Service Module.
All of the crew
members – Endeavour Commander Dom Gorie, Kelly, Godwin and Dan
Tani, along with Expedition Three crew members Culbertson, Dezhurov
and Mikhail Tyurin and the Expedition Four crew, Onufrienko, Dan Bursch
and Carl Walz – will meet late in the day today for a final briefing
in preparation for Endeavour’s departure tomorrow. Following final
farewells tomorrow morning, about 7:30 a.m., the hatches between Endeavour
and the station will be closed for a final time during this mission.
Endeavour will undock from the station at 10 a.m. Saturday, and after
a brief fly-around of the station, a final engine burn will mark Endeavour’s
departure from the station, leaving the Expedition Four crew on board
for a planned five-month stay.
Endeavour’s
crew was awakened at 5:12 a.m. today by a traditional Russian song,
“My Sweetheart,” played for Onufrienko, Dezhurov and Tyurin.
The Expedition Four crew was awakened about a half-hour later with a
wake-up tone on board the station.
Endeavour and the
International Space Station remain in good shape, orbiting at an average
altitude of 241 statute miles. Wednesday, the crew and flight control
teams noted a transient problem with one of the shuttle’s three
inertial measurement units (IMUs), the primary navigation units for
the shuttle. That IMU, designated IMU2, experienced about an hour-long
“drift rate,” subsequently returning to normal operation.
Flight controllers have taken IMU2 off line and declared it “failed,”
though it has performed normally since the initial problem was observed.
The remaining two IMUs on board are performing well and the loss of
a single IMU has no impact on Endeavour’s mission or planned landing.
Endeavour could operate well on only one IMU if required.
The next STS-108
mission status report will be issued about 6 p.m. today or as events
warrant.
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