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STS-99, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 03 Saturday,
February 12, 2000 - 6:30 a.m. CST
Endeavour astronauts
began mapping operations on the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission, which
will provide maps of the Earth unprecedented in accuracy and uniformity.
The first swath was begun as the orbiter crossed over southern Asia
and continued until Endeavour flew over the continent’s eastern
coast and moved over the northern Pacific Ocean. The mapping will continue
through the mission until the antenna mast is retracted before landing.
Because of the
24-hour-a-day activity aboard Endeavour, the six crewmembers are divided
into two teams. Blue Team members Dom Gorie, Janice Voss and Mamoru
Mohri began the first mapping swath, covering a 140-mile-wide path,
at about 11:31 p.m. Friday. It was the beginning of coverage of more
than 70 percent of the Earth’s land surface. The mapping will cover
an area between 60 degrees north and 56 degrees south, where about 95
percent of the Earth’s population lives.
The Red Team, led
by Mission Commander Kevin Kregel, includes Mission Specialists Janet
Kavandi and Gerhard Thiele. Their first shift was intense. It included
deployment and checkout of the almost 200-foot mast supporting the outboard
antenna structure. It is the largest rigid structure ever deployed in
space. The Red Team began its sleep period at about 10:45 p.m. Friday
and is scheduled to be awakened at 6:44 this morning.
After mast deployment,
tests revealed that the mast’s damping system, designed as a kind
of a shock absorber for the mast, was not working as expected. Flight
controllers decided to leave the dampers in their locked position. Calculations
showed that the mast was at no risk without the dampers activated.
All planned science
data takes have been acquired successfully and all indications from
the telemetry show that the radars are performing nominally. Data has
been sent to JPL for analysis and early indications are that the data
is of excellent quality. Additional reports about mapping results are
expected about 12:00 noon CST.
Shortly after 5:30
a.m. Saturday, Voss and Gorie held a news conference with correspondents
from NBC and CNN.
Saturday is scheduled
to be the first full day of Shuttle Radar Topography Mission mapping.
Endeavour systems continued to function normally.
The next mission
status report will be issued at 6 p.m. Saturday, or as events warrant.
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