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Columbia was the first Space Shuttle that traveled to Earth orbit.
 
STS 129: Nov 12 TBC
Last Space Shuttle Flight
STS 134: Sep 16th 2010
188 days, 12 hours, 45 minutes left
STS 128 Mission / Videos

STS 128 Lands at Edwards!
Discovery Lands at Edwards AFB.
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STS 128 Flyaround!
Discovery performs flyaround of ISS.
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STS 128 1st Spacewalk!
Discovery crew's 1st Spacewalk.
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Discovery In Orbit!
Discovery and crew are now in orbit as their mission begins.
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Lift Off!
Discovery Lifts off from Florida..
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Launch is Delayed!
Discovery's Launch attempt failed due to bad weather..
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Discovery Rolls Out!
Discovery rolls out along the crawlerway..
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Mission: STS-128
Orbiter: Discovery
Primary Payload: 30th station flight (17A), Leonardo Multi-Purpose Logistics Module, Lightweight Multi-Purpose Experiment Support Structure Carrier
Launch Date: Aug 29
Launch Time: 04:59 a.m. BST
Launch Pad: 39A
Landing Window: 10 minutes
Inclination/Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles

Landed:Sat, Sept. 12, 2009, 01:53 a.m. BST
Landing Site:Edwards Air Force Base, California
Mission Elapsed Time: 13 days, 20 hours, 53 minutes, 45 seconds
Official Landing Times

Main gear touchdown:01:53:25 a.m. BST
Nose gear touchdown:01:53:34 a.m. BST
Wheels stop:01:54:35 a.m. BST>br> Total miles:more than 5.7 million
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STS 120 Mission PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Admin   
STS 120 Insignia
A series of recent shuttle missions have added to the International Space Station's
exterior with new elements for its main truss. Now, Discovery will take into orbit a
connecting module that will increase the orbiting laboratory's interior space.

October's STS-120 mission will bring the Harmony module, christened after a school
contest, that will provide attachment points for European and Japanese laboratory
modules. Known in technical circles as Node 2, it is similar to the six-sided Unity
module that links the U.S. and Russian sections of the station.

“STS-120 is such a cool mission,” said Commander Pam Melroy. “Node 2 is the
expansion of the space station’s capability to bring international laboratories up.
It’s the expansion of our capability to carry additional people.

"It has additional life support equipment that will allow us to expand out beyond a
three-person crew. It’s this big boost in the capability which is really exciting,” she said.
Built in Italy for the United States, Harmony is a high-tech hallway and Tinkertoy-like hub.
It is a 23- by 14-foot passageway that will connect the U.S. segment of the station to
the European and Japanese modules, to be installed later this year and early next year,
respectively.

Harmony will be the first new U.S. pressurized component to be added to the station
since the Quest Airlock was attached to one of Unity's six berthing ports in 2001.

“It’s the gateway to the international partners,” Lead Station Flight Director Derek Hassman
 said. “As the station is configured today, there’s nowhere to put all the international partner
 modules until we deliver and activate Node 2. That’s the piece that makes the rest possible.”

jsc2003e39020 -- Harmony Node 2; jsc2003e37640 -- The International Space Station
Image above: At left, is a detailed view of the Harmony Node 2. At right, is a view of
Harmony attached to the International Space Station's U.S. Destiny laboratory.


Installing Harmony should be straightforward, Hassman said. But actually opening the
gateway will require some shuffling. The shuttle will be docked to an existing adapter port
where the node is meant to attach, so Harmony will be installed in a temporary spot on the
 first connecting node, Unity, until the mission is over. It will be moved by the station crew
once the shuttle leaves.

“It’s kind of a shell game,” Lead Shuttle Flight Director Rick LaBrode said. “We’re going to put
it on the left side of Node 1, and then, after the mission undocks, we’ll robotically remove the
port the shuttle docks to from the end of the lab and put it on Node 2. And then we’re going to
 take the Node 2 and put it on the end of the lab.”

After that, it’ll be ready for the European and Japanese laboratories. But labs require electricity.
So Melroy’s crew – which includes Pilot George Zamka, mission specialists Scott Parazynski,
Douglas Wheelock, Stephanie Wilson, Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency, and
 Daniel Tani, who will trade places with station Flight Engineer Clay Anderson as an expedition
 crew member – will continue to set up the station's exterior support truss and its power system.

After Harmony is installed, they’ll move the truss segment holding the station’s first set of solar
arrays to a new home. The Port 6, or P6 arrays, as they are known, have been attached to the
middle of the truss for the past seven years, positioned vertically to the rest of the station,
acting as a temporary power system.

With the addition of two sets of arrays brought to the station on recent shuttle flights, the original
arrays can be relocated during STS-120 to their permanent position at the very end of the left
side of the truss. But that has its own trials and tribulations.

sts120-s-002 -- The STS-120 crew
Image above: The official portait of the seven member STS-120 crew.

“This truss was the one where, when they retracted the solar array in December, they had
difficulties,” LaBrode said. “Well, we’re going to take that during our mission and actually move it
all the way outboard. It’s tight clearances, and the way that the robotics operations are here, the
 arm is completely extended out.”

In fact, the space station’s arm was designed with this move in mind. Engineers knew the arm
would never need to reach farther than this segment – or it’s mirror on the right side – and so
they built it to go just that far and not much farther. That creates some challenges. LaBrode
compared it to trying to do something with your arm completely straight, rather than bent at the
elbow – it limits your flexibility.

“It’s the design-limiting case,” Melroy said. “It’s the maximum capability of the robotic arm’s reach,
and there are no cameras out there. So our spacewalkers are going to have to be out there
going, ‘OK, a little bit to the right,’ guiding the robotic arm operator.”

Hassman said he’s confident they can pull it off.

“The good thing about the robotics stuff is the experience we have and all the tools the
spacewalkers have allow us to really nail that stuff – knock it flat in terms of the planning,” he said.

And this is one case where familiarity does not breed contempt – or even boredom.

“It’s funny,” LaBrode said. “This is my fourth lead, but I see myself saying this every time. I know all
the other ones have been pretty exciting, but this has got to be the most exciting one. They’re all
 completely critical to the success, all the way up to completing our president’s vision, going to the
next step. But they just seem to get more and more complicated as they go along.”

Source: Brandi Dean - Johnson Space Center
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 07 November 2007 )
 
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