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STS-109, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 03
Friday, March 1, 2002 - 9:30 p.m. CST
The crew of Columbia
was awakened for its first full day in space at 8:22 p.m. CST with the
song “Blue Telescope” by John Hiatt. In its morning mail, the crew received news that mission managers are optimistic the full
mission will go forward as planned in spite of low flow in a shuttle
cooling line.
Commander Scott
Altman, Pilot Duane Carey, Flight Engineer Nancy Currie and spacewalkers
John Grunsfeld, Rick Linnehan, Jim Newman and Mike Massimino are beginning a complex mission to replace and upgrade key systems in the Hubble Space
Telescope – a job that requires five back-to-back spacewalks, each
more than six and a half hours long.
Mission managers
met Friday evening to review information about the performance of the
port side freon cooling system in Columbia’s payload bay, which
exhibited a degraded flow rate shortly after launch. They gave Columbia’s
crew a “go” to proceed with normal operations today and expressed
confidence the shuttle will be allowed to complete its full mission.
However, shuttle managers will meet again at midday Saturday for a further
review of the potential cooling system problem and they are expected
to reach a final conclusion at that time on proceeding with a Sunday
capture of Hubble and the ensuing spacewalks. The degraded cooling system
is one of two such systems aboard Columbia. The other system is operating
perfectly. Only one of the systems is needed to provide cooling for
the shuttle's electronics, but the concerns are whether the degraded
cooling system can be used as a backup in the event the fully operational
system were to experience unexpected problems. Although the one system
is operating at a lower capacity, the problem has had no impact on any
of the crew's activities and is not noticeable by the crew. Altman and
Carey are getting ready to fire Columbia’s reaction control system
thrusters to fine-tune its approach to Hubble at 11:10 p.m. CST. Also
tonight, the crew will test Columbia’s robotic arm, examine the
spacesuits on board, check out rendezvous equipment, and prepare the
Flight Support System that will hold the telescope while it is berthed
in the orbiter’s payload bay.
Currie is scheduled
to use Columbia’s robot arm to grapple Hubble shortly after 3 a.m.
CST Sunday, setting the stage for the first spacewalk early Monday morning.
During Hubble’s
fourth service mission, the crew of Columbia will spend five days replacing
the observatory’s solar arrays, its main power switching unit,
and a gyroscopic pointing mechanism called a Reaction Wheel Assembly.
In addition, the spacewalkers will install a new camera called the Advanced
Camera for Surveys that can view twice the area of the sky as Hubble’s
current camera. The spacewalkers will install a cooling system and an
external radiator for the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer,
which requires very cold temperatures to function.
Columbia is in
a 356 by 127 statute mile orbit of the Earth, catching up to Hubble
about 1,000 miles every orbit. The next STS-109 mission status report
will be issued Saturday morning or earlier if events warrant.
--end--
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