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STS-92, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 05 Friday,
October 13, 2000 - 8:00 p.m. CDT
Commander Brian
Duffy gently maneuvered the Space Shuttle Discovery to a flawless docking
with the 70-ton International Space Station this afternoon as the two
craft flew 240 miles above Russia.
Discovery latched
onto the station at 12:45 p.m. CDT, completing a perfect rendezvous
that had been under way since Discovery's launch on Wednesday. Later,
Astronaut Mike Lopez-Alegria opened the outermost hatch to the station
at about 3:30 p.m. CDT. Soon thereafter, at about 4:15 p.m., Lopez-Alegria
opened the hatch into the station's Unity module, and Duffy entered
the orbiting outpost, followed closely by Lopez-Alegria and fellow crew
members Leroy Chiao and Pilot Pam Melroy. The crew then began transferring
equipment and supplies from Discovery to the station, continuing to
set up the complex for the arrival of the first resident crew, a mission
called Expedition 1 that is planned to launch at the end of the month.
Meanwhile, at the
aft controls in Discovery's cockpit, Astronaut Bill McArthur and Japanese
Astronaut Koichi Wakata again powered up the Shuttle's mechanical arm.
Wakata and McArthur, the backup arm operator for the mission, maneuvered
the robotic arm for a camera survey of the station and the Shuttle's
payload bay. Tomorrow, Wakata will use the arm to attach the first of
two major components Discovery has brought to the complex - an exterior
framework that houses gyroscopes and communications equipment called
the Z-1 truss.
Flight controllers
have decided to attempt no further troubleshooting of Discovery's Ku-Band
communications system which failed yesterday. The failure will reduce
the amount of television that can be transmitted to the ground during
the mission, however the crew did send television of the docking and
entry into the station to the ground today through alternate communications
systems. A few such opportunities for television will be available each
day during the remainder of the flight, although they will usually be
only a few minutes in length. Flight controllers also use a sequential
still video system, a still image updated every few seconds, to follow
activities aboard the Shuttle.
The crew will begin
a sleep period at 9:17 p.m. CDT and awaken at 5:17 a.m. CDT Saturday
for day four of the mission. The next Mission Control Center status
report will be issued at 7 a.m. CDT or as events warrant.
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