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STS-110, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 07
Thursday, April 11, 2002 – 6:00 p.m. CDT
The expansion of
the International Space Station continued today with the installation
of the 13 1/2 ton S0 (S-Zero) truss segment on the orbital outpost.
Assisted by Expedition Four Flight Engineer Dan Bursch, Atlantis Mission
Specialist Ellen Ochoa gently lifted the truss out of the shuttle's
payload bay at 5:30 a.m. Central time through the use of the station’s
robotic arm and maneuvered it onto a clamp at the top of the station's
Destiny Laboratory. It took just under four hours to complete the delicate
procedure.
During the S-Zero
installation, Atlantis Commander Mike Bloomfield and Pilot Steve Frick
operated the shuttle's robotic arm to provide additional camera views
to Ochoa and Bursch, who were working in the Destiny Lab at one of the
robotic workstations. The truss will serve as the backbone for future
station expansion to the length of a football field. S-Zero contains
navigational devices, computers, cooling and power systems necessary
to attach additional laboratories to the complex.
Within minutes
after the new truss was temporarily latched to the Destiny Lab, mission
specialists Rex Walheim and Steve Smith left the station's Quest Airlock
at 9:36 a.m. Central time to begin the first of four spacewalks of the
mission to electrically and structurally mate S-Zero to the station.
Smith and Walheim
first unfurled and firmly attached two of four mounting struts on the
truss to Destiny before deploying trays of avionics equipment and cables
on the truss which include power, data and fluid lines connecting Destiny
to the S-Zero. They also attached an umbilical system from the truss
to the Mobile Transporter housed on the forward face of the huge girder.
The umbilical will enable the Transporter, which is the first railcar
in space, to move up and down the length of the station to position
the ISS robotic arm for future assembly work. Two other struts on the
truss will be mated to Destiny Saturday during the second spacewalk,
permanently bolting the truss to the Laboratory.
Working deliberately
to connect all of the critical power connections, Walheim spent the
day working at the end of the station’s Canadarm2, the first time
the large arm has been used as a form of cherry picker to maneuver astronauts
during assembly work at the ISS. Smith operated as a so-called “free-floater”,
tethered to the station and to various work sites around the truss itself.
Atlantis astronaut Jerry Ross and ISS Flight Engineer Carl Walz took
turns choreographing the spacewalk from the aft flight deck of the shuttle.
With all but two
tasks successfully completed, Smith and Walheim returned to Quest late
this afternoon and ended their spacewalk at 5:24 p.m. Central time,
completing a 7 hour, 48 minute excursion. It was the 35th spacewalk
devoted to station assembly and the 10th staged from the station itself.
As Smith and Walheim wrapped up their work, flight controllers reported
that the activation of the S-Zero Truss had begun and that all of the
initial systems appear to be in excellent shape.
Time ran out before
Smith and Walheim could install two circuit breakers on the truss, but
that task will be picked up on a subsequent spacewalk.
After a long and
tedious day, the shuttle and station crew members were scheduled to
begin an eight-hour sleep period at 7:44 p.m. Central time and will
be awakened just before 4 a.m. Friday.
The next STS-110
mission status report will be issued Friday morning, or earlier if events
warrant.
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