|
STS-110, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 13
Sunday, April 14, 2002 – 5:30 p.m. CDT
Two astronauts
rewired the robotic arm on the International Space Station today and
released locking bolts on the first space railcar during a 6 hour, 27
minute spacewalk, the third of Atlantis’ assembly flight to the
international complex.
The stage is now
set for the inaugural run Monday of the so-called Mobile Transporter,
a flatcar designed to transport the space station’s robotic arm
up and down an integrated truss system that will span the length of
a football field.
Within minutes
after starting their spacewalk at 8:48 a.m. Central time, Steve Smith
and Rex Walheim released a claw-like device on the top of the Destiny
Laboratory to which the new 13 ½ ton S-Zero (S0) truss was initially
attached on Thursday. With the truss’ four large struts now securely
bolted to Destiny, the claw was no longer needed.
Smith and Walheim
then reconfigured a number of connectors providing electricity to the
58-foot-long Canadarm2 robotic arm on the station so it can be powered
from the S-Zero truss rather than Destiny. The arm has two sets, or
“strings” of avionics equipment for its operation. As Smith
and Walheim worked deliberately, one set of avionics was rewired and
tested, followed by a separate set of redundant avionics.
Smith spent most
of the day riding at the end of the shuttle’s robotic arm, which
was operated by Pilot Steve Frick during the rewiring of its companion
station arm. Walheim was the so-called “free-floating” astronaut,
tethered to the station to assist Smith. It was the seventh spacewalk
of Smith’s career. He is the second most experienced U.S. spacewalker
behind crewmate Jerry Ross, who helped choreograph today’s excursion
from inside Atlantis with the help of Lee Morin. It was Walheim’s
second spacewalk.
With Canadarm2
successfully rewired and both of its electrical, data and video circuit
sets checked out, Smith and Walheim pressed ahead to release clamps
which secured the Mobile Transporter to the S-Zero truss during its
launch last week. The railcar, which weighs about 1900 pounds, will
be commanded Monday by ground controllers to move about 32 feet up and
down the truss at a glacial speed of a little less than one inch per
second in the first test of its computers, drive motors, suspension
unit, video and data umbilicals and the first section of rails on the
S-Zero.
The railcar, and
an associated Mobile Base System device to be installed on the transporter
in early June on the next shuttle assembly flight to the ISS, will ultimately
enable the robotic arm to travel to various worksites on the expanding
trusses of the station for future construction. The Mobile Base System
will be the platform upon which the Canadarm2 will attach itself to
be driven up and down the length of the ISS.
The only task not
completed today was the attachment of a 14-foot ladder called the Airlock
Spur from the S-Zero truss to the Quest Airlock designed to simplify
the path for future spacewalkers moving back and forth from the truss
to the airlock itself.
As the spacewalk
neared its completion, final diagnostic tests of the newly wired station
arm were taking longer than planned, and because the Canadarm2 is required
for the airlock ladder to be pivoted away from the truss to Quest, flight
controllers decided to defer its installation until the final spacewalk
on Tuesday.
Smith and Walheim
finally returned to Quest and completed their spacewalk at 3:15 p.m.
Central time with the repressurization of the airlock.
Atlantis astronaut
Ellen Ochoa and ISS Expedition Four crew member Dan Bursch backed up
Frick in the operation of the shuttle’s robot arm during today’s
spacewalk, the 37th devoted to space station assembly. Commander Mike
Bloomfield documented the spacewalk from Atlantis’ aft flight deck
while Expedition Four Commander Yury Onufrienko and Flight Engineer
Carl Walz continued to transfer supplies from the shuttle to the station
for future use.
Late today, Frick
conducted an hour-long reboost of the ISS, using Atlantis’ steering
jets to move the station higher by about two statute miles. It was the
second of three planned maneuvers to raise the station’s altitude
and the second in as many days.
The ten crew members
are scheduled to begin an eight-hour sleep period at 7:44 p.m. Central
time tonight and will be awakened just before 4 a.m. to prepare for
the testing of the new Mobile Transporter.
The JSC newsroom
is closed and will reopen Monday at 5 a.m.
The next STS-110
mission status report will be issued Monday morning after crew wake
up, or earlier, if events warrant.
###
NASA Johnson Space Center Mission Status Reports and other information are available automatically
by sending an Internet electronic mail message to majordomo@listserver.jsc.nasa.gov.
In the body of the message (not the subject line) users should type
"subscribe hsfnews" (no quotes). This will add the e-mail address that
sent the subscribe message to the news release distribution list. The
system will reply with a confirmation via e-mail of each subscription.
Once you have subscribed you will receive future news releases via e-mail.
|