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STS-99, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 15 Friday,
February 18, 2000 - 7 a.m. CST
With unprecedented
detail of well over half of the world's terrain already safely stored
aboard, Endeavour's crew continued mapping the Earth uninterrupted this
morning, marching toward more than nine full days of radar observations
thanks to successful fuel conservation measures.
Early today, Endeavour
completed its sixth "Flycast Maneuver" trim burn, a gentle
engine firing that maintains the Shuttle's altitude at around 150 statute
miles for the precise mapping work. Today's burn gave the Shuttle a
slightly larger boost than previous daily firings, a measure that will
allow controllers to save fuel by eliminating a subsequent firing on
Sunday. The next trim burn is now planned for midday on Saturday. So
far, the Shuttle Radar Topography instruments aboard Endeavour have
mapped 83 percent, or almost 40 million square miles, of the target
area once, an area larger than the Americas, Africa and Australia combined.
More than 50 percent of the target area, over 24 million square miles,
has been mapped with two or more passes. Endeavour images 40,000 square
miles of land every minute, a rate that would allow the Shuttle to map
the state of Alaska in 15 minutes and the state of Rhode Island in less
than two seconds.
In addition to
the changes in trim burns, other fuel conservation measures aboard Endeavour
have included changing the way waste water is dumped overboard, slightly
relaxing the spacecraft's stringent attitude control guidelines and
limiting the use of some equipment. Early in the mission, the failure
of a tiny thruster at the end of the 197-foot mast protruding from Endeavour's
cargo bay resulted in increased use of the Shuttle's steering jets and
fuel. On Thursday, flight controllers noted that the small nitrogen
gas thruster on the mast now appeared to be again providing some thrust,
a trend that could further improve the Shuttle's predicted fuel consumption.
While the radar
mapping continues, a student-operated camera mounted in one of Endeavour's
windows also has set a record pace. So far, the experiment, called EarthKAM,
has sent down almost 1,400 photos of Earth to middle school students.
On four previous shuttle flights combined, EarthKAM sent down a total
of about 2,000 photos.
Working around
the clock, Endeavour's crew is divided into two shifts. The Blue
Team -- Pilot Dom Gorie and Mission Specialists Janice Voss and Mamoru
Mohri -- are now on duty. Voss and Mohri took time out from their work
this morning to provide television of the high-rate recorders used for
the mapping operations and a High-Definition Television Camera.
The recorders
use high-density tapes to capture the radar mapping data. About 270
tapes will be recorded, containing a volume of data that would fill
about 13,500 CDs. The data will allow topographical maps to be created
of a majority of Earth that will be several times more accurate than
are available today. The HDTV camcorder aboard Endeavour is one of the
first steps in NASA's transition to HDTV.
The Red Team,
Commander Kevin Kregel and Mission Specialists Janet Kavandi and Gerhard
Thiele, are sleeping and will awaken at 10:14 a.m. CST. The entire crew
will participate in a press conference at 11:59 a.m. today, fielding
questions from U.S. and Japanese reporters at NASA centers. Subsequently,
Thiele, Kregel, Kavandi and Voss will take a call from German Research
Minister Edelgard Buhlmann.
Endeavour continues
to function well. The next status report will be issued at 6 p.m. Friday,
or as mission events warrant.
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