STS-108
|
This is a mission of the United States Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle program | |
---|---|
Mission Insignia | |
Missing image Sts-108-patch.jpg | |
Mission Statistics | |
Mission: | STS-108 |
Shuttle: | Endeavour |
Launch Pad: | 39-B |
Launch: | Wednesday, December 5, 2001 22:19:28 UTC |
Landing: | KSC, December 17, 2001 17:56:13 UTC |
Duration: | 11 days, 19 hours, 36 minutes, 45 seconds |
Orbit Altitude: | 122 nautical miles (226 km) |
Orbit Inclination: | 51.6 degrees |
Distance Traveled: | unknown |
Crew photo | |
Missing image Sts-108_crew.jpg | Previous Mission: STS-105 |
Next Mission: STS-109 |
Contents |
Crew
- Dominic L. Gorie (3), Commander
- Mark E. Kelly (1), Pilot
- Linda M. Godwin (4), Mission Specialist
- Daniel M. Tani (1), Mission Specialist
Launched ISS Expedition 4 Crew:
- Yuri I. Onufrienko (2), RSA ISS Commander
- Carl E. Walz (4), ISS Flight Engineer
- Daniel W. Bursch (4), ISS Flight Engineer
Landed ISS Expedition 3 Crew:
- Frank L. Culbertson, Jr. (3) ISS Commander
- Mikhail Turin (1), RSA ISS Flight Engineer
- Vladimir N. Dezhurov (2), RSA ISS Soyuz Cdr
Mission Parameters
- Mass: 4,082 kg payload
- Perigee: 353 km
- Apogee: 377 km
- Inclination: 51.6°
- Period: 92 min
Docking with ISS
- Docked: December 7, 2001, 20:03:29 UTC
- Undocked: December 15, 2001, 17:28:00 UTC
- Time Docked: 7 days, 21 h, 24 min, 31 s
Space walks
- Godwin and Tani - EVA 1
- EVA 1 Start: December 10, 2001 - 17:52 UTC
- EVA 1 End: December 10, - 22:04 UTC
- Duration: 4 hours, 12 minutes
Mission Highlights
STS-108 will be the 12th space shuttle mission to visit the International Space Station and the 4th mission to utilize the Italian Multipurpose Logistics Module (MPLM). There are three MPLMs and this flight will use the one called Raffaello which flew once before on STS-100. Raffaello will be attached to the stations Unity node while unloading its cargo, much of which will be transferred into the U.S. Lab called Destiny. Eight resupply stowage racks and four resupply stowage platforms will be unloaded.
The flight will also feature a spacewalk to install thermal blankets over the Beta Gimbal Assemblies (BGAs) at the bases of the space station's solar panels. The BGAs, mounted atop the stations P6 Truss, control the panels to keep them at an optimal angle in relation to the sun.
Other Payloads on this mission include the Lightweight Mission Peculiar Support Structure Carrier (LMC) with four Get Away Special (GAS) experiments and the Multiple Application Customized Hitchhiker-1 (MACH-1) Payload. The MACH-1 payload contains the Starshine, capillary Pumped Loop Experiment-3, the Prototype Synchrotron Radiation Detector, two Space Experiment Modules containing multiple small experiments and a GAS canister containing seven experiments.
Just forward of the Hitchhiker, on the right payload bay wall, are two GAS containers, one housing seven experiments from Utah State University and the other with an experiment looking at smoldering combustion in microgravity. Behind Raffaello, at the rear of the cargo bay, is the Lightweight Multipurpose Experiment Support Structure Carrier (LMC), with four more GAS canisters. One has three Penn State University experiments and another contains 10 student experiments. A third houses a Swedish Space Corp. experiment focusing on weak Marangoni flows and the fourth, from Ames Research Center, is a test of a prototype instrument cooler for planetary missions. In Endeavour's middeck area will be the Avian Development Facility and the Commercial Biomedical Testing Module Animal Enclosure Module. The Avian Development Facility is flown to validate subsystems and will contain two experiments on development in space of Japanese quail eggs. The Animal Enclosure Module is a commercial experiment using mice and seeking information that could lead to better treatment of osteoporosis in humans.
Related articles
- Space science
- Space shuttle
- List of space shuttle missions
- List of human spaceflights chronologically
- List of ISS spacewalks
- List of spacewalks
External links
- NASA mission summary (http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/missions/sts-108/mission-sts-108.html)
Previous Mission: STS-105 |
Space Shuttle program | Next Mission: STS-109 |