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STS-97 (101)
- Endeavour (15)
- Pad 39-B (46)
- 101st Shuttle Mission
- 15th Flight OV-105
- Night Launch (24)
- Night Landing (16)
- KSC Landing (53)
- NOTE: Click Here for Countdown Homepage
Crew:
- Brent W. Jett (3), Commander
- Michael J. Bloomfield (2), Pilot
- Joseph R. Tanner (3), Mission Specialist
- Carlos I. Noriega (2), Mission Specialist
- Marc Garneau (3), (CSA) Mission Specialist
Milestones:
- OPF -- 02/24/00 (Reference KSC Shuttle Status 2/28/2000)
- VAB --
- PAD -- 10/31/00 (Reference KSC Shuttle Status 10/31/2000)
Payload:
- Space Station Flight ISS-04-4A (PV Module P6)
Mission Objectives:
Click here for Additional Info on STS-97
- STS-97 will build and enhance the capabilities of the International
Space Station.It will deliver the first set of U.S.-provided solar
arrays and batteries as well as radiators to provide cooling. The
Shuttle will spend 5-days docked to the station, which at that time
will be staffed by the first station crew. Two spacewalks will be
conducted to complete assembly operations while the arrays are
attached and unfurled. A communications system for voice and telemetry
also will be installed.
- During 10 days punctuated by space flight firsts, the Space Shuttle
Endeavour on mission STS-97 will see the International Space Station
spread its wings -- giant solar arrays that will quintuple the
station's electrical power, enabling future unparalleled research.
- The 240-foot solar arrays to be attached and unfolded by
Endeavour’s international crew of five – Commander Brent Jett,
Pilot Mike Bloomfield and Mission Specialists Joe Tanner, Carlos
Noriega and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Marc Garneau – will be
the longest structure to ever fly in space. Endeavour will carry aloft
the United States-developed solar arrays, associated electronics,
batteries, cooling radiator, and support structure. The entire 17-ton
package is called the P6 Integrated Truss Segment, and it will be the
heaviest and largest element yet delivered to the station aboard a
Shuttle.
- The addition of the huge solar arrays – only the first of three
identical such sets that will be attached to the station in coming
years -- will clearly distinguish the International Space Station from
any predecessor spacecraft. They will provide the station with more
electrical power, a key to successful modern research, than anything
that has flown before. Endeavour also will be the first Space Shuttle
to visit an inhabited International Space Station, although the
Shuttle crew and station crew of Commander Bill Shepherd, Pilot Yuri
Gidzenko and Flight Engineer Sergei Krikalev will not greet one
another until the hatches are fully opened between the spacecraft on
the seventh day of the mission.
- Endeavour is targeted for launch on STS-97 at 10:05 p.m. EST from
the Kennedy Space Center. Florida, at the opening of a launch window
that extends for between two to five minutes. After two days spent
slowly closing in on the complex and checking out equipment, Jett will
maneuver Endeavour to dock with the International Space Station just
before 2 p.m. on Dec. 2, given an on-time launch.
- Immediately after docking, Garneau will use the shuttle's 50-foot,
Canadian-built robotic arm to initially lift the truss segment a few
feet out of the shuttle cargo bay, holding it in position there
overnight to control its temperature. Also, the Shuttle crew will open
the station's outermost hatch and stow some early supplies in an outer
compartment of the station to await retrieval later in the mission by
the Expedition One crew.
- On the following day, the crew will begin installing the solar
arrays on the station, with Tanner and Noriega conducting the first of
two planned six and a half hour space walks. With Tanner and Noriega
assisting from outside, Garneau will use the robotic arm to attach the
truss segment package, including the folded arrays and electronics,
atop a smaller exterior framework already on the station. Tanner and
Noriega will visually assist Garneau to properly align the new
segment. The two space walkers will tighten attachment bolts to ensure
the P6 truss is mechanically secure. Next, they will connect
umbilicals for power and data between the new equipment and the rest
of the station, as well as release various restraints that were in
place to protect equipment during the Shuttle’s launch. Near the
end of the first space walk, the crew will send commands to begin
deploying the solar arrays, folded for launch into a box only 20
inches thick, to their full outstretched length.
- A second space walk by Tanner and Noriega on the sixth day of the
mission will move a communications antenna to a location high on the
new truss segment. During the last half of the space walk, they will
prepare the station for the next shuttle visit that will deliver the
first laboratory, the United States' Destiny lab, in January 2001. The
capability exists to add a third space walk by Tanner and Noriega to
the mission if needed.
- The Shuttle and station crews will greet one another for the first
time on the seventh day of the mission as they fully open the hatches
between the two spacecraft. The crews will spend two days working
together, transferring supplies and equipment back and
forth. Endeavour's visit and the power from the new solar arrays will
allow the station crew to begin conducting some of the first
experiments aboard the station after Endeavour departs. Those
experiments will include: student experiments conducted in conjunction
with the national JASON education project that will study the effects
of space on soybean and corn seeds; an experiment developed by the Air
Force and the Massachusetts Institute of Science and Technology that
will study new control mechanisms for satellites; and several medical
evaluations that will study the effectiveness of exercise on the
station's treadmill and other exercise equipment.
- Based an on-time launch on Nov. 30, Bloomfield is scheduled to
undock Endeavour from the station just after noon CST on Dec. 8,
performing a full-circle flyaround of the complex before departing the
vicinity. The day after the undocking will be spent preparing
Endeavour for landing, and the Shuttle's touchdown would occur at the
Kennedy Space Center about 5:46 p.m. CST on Dec. 10, nine days, 20
hours and 41 minutes after launch.
- STS-97 will be the 15th flight ofEndeavour and the 101st Space
Shuttle mission.
Launch:
- November 30, 2000 10:06 p.m. EST Launch Window was less than 5 min.
-
- External tank loading was orignally scheduled for 12:30 p.m. EST
but was delayed until 2:51 p.m while the >Mission Management Team
discussed a loose bracket hanging down from the side of the white
room. The White Room access arm was retracted and the bracket
was removed at 2:35 p.m. At 5:35 p.m. EST, external tank loading
was complete. At 6:16pm the flight crew left the O&C building
and departed for launch Pad 39-B. They entered the orbiter and
- hatch was closed and locked for flight. With about 9 minutes
remaining in the planned 45 minute hold (9:46 p.m. EST) the
range identified they were a no-go for launch while they
investigated a problem with a momentary signal dropout. The
problem was quickly resolved and the countdown picked up on
schedule at the T-minus 9 minute mark at 9:57 p.m EST. Launch
occured at the opening of the window.
Orbit:
- Altitude: 173nm
- Inclination: 51.6
- Orbits: 170
- Duration: 10 days, 19 hours, 58 minutes, 20 seconds.
- Distance: miles
Hardware:
- SRB:
- SRM:
- ET : SN-105
- MLP : 1
- SSME-1: SN-
- SSME-2: SN-
- SSME-3: SN-
Landing:
- KSC December 11, 6:04 p.m. EST KSC Runway 15
- A go for the deorbit burn was given at 4:37 p.m. EST . The burn took
place at 4:57 EST. Landing Times:
- Main Gear Down MET 10 days 19 hours 57 min 25 sec (6:03:25 EST)
- Nose Gear Down MET 10 days 19 hours 57 min 34 sec (6:03:34 EST)
- Wheel Stop MET 10 days 19 hours 58 min 20 sec (6:04:20 EST)
Mission Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 1 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 2 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 3 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 4 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 5 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 6 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 7 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 8 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 9 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 10 Highlights:
STS-97 Flight Day 11 Highlights:
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Last Updated Wednesday July 25 06:41:43 EDT 2001
Jim Dumoulin (Redacted)
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