STS-72
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STS-72 is a Space Shuttle program mission.
Space Shuttle program | |
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Mission Insignia | |
Missing image Sts-72-patch.jpg | |
Mission Statistics | |
Mission: | STS-72 |
Shuttle: | Endeavour |
Launch Pad: | 39-B |
Launch: | January 11, 1996 at 4:41:00.072 EST |
Landing: | KSC, Saturday, January 20, 1996 2:41:41 A.M. EST Runway 15 |
Duration: | 8 days, 22 hours, 01 minutes, 47 seconds. |
Orbit Altitude: | 250 nautical miles (463 km) |
Orbit Inclination: | 28.45 degrees |
Distance Traveled: | 3.7 million miles (6 million km) |
Crew photo | |
Missing image Sts-72.jpg | |
Previous Mission: STS-74 |
Next Mission: STS-75 |
Contents |
Crew
- Brian Duffy (3), Commander
- Brent W. Jett (1), Pilot
- Leroy Chiao (2), Mission Specialist
- Daniel T. Barry (1), Mission Specialist
- Winston E. Scott (1), Mission Specialist
- Koichi Wakata (1), Mission Specialist - Japan
Mission Parameters
- Mass:
- Orbiter Liftoff: 112,182 kg
- Orbiter Landing: 98,549 kg
- Payload: 6,510 kg
- Perigee: 185 km
- Apogee: 470 km
- Inclination: 28.4°
- Period: 91.1 min
Space walks
- Chiao and Barry - EVA 1
- EVA 1 Start: January 15, 1995 - 05:35 UTC
- EVA 1 End: January 15, - 11:44 UTC
- Duration: 6 hours, 09 minutes
- Chiao and Scott - EVA 2
- EVA 2 Start: January 17, 1993 - 05:40 UTC
- EVA 2 End: January 17, - 12:34 UTC
- Duration: 6 hours, 54 minutes
Mission Highlights
The primary objective of the STS-72 mission is to capture and return to Earth a Japanese microgravity research spacecraft known as Space Flyer Unit (SFU). The 7,885 lb (3,577 kg) SFU spacecraft was launched by Japan's National Space Development Agency (NASDA) from Tanegashima Space Center in Japan at 8:01 UT on March 18, 1995 aboard a Japanese H-II rocket (HII-3).
The STS-72 mission will also deploy (for about 50 hours) and then retrieve the Office of Aeronautics and Space Technology Flyer (OAST-Flyer) spacecraft. OAST-Flyer is the seventh in a series of missions aboard reuseable free-flying Spartan carriers. It consists of four experiments: Return Flux Experiment (REFLEX), Global Positioning System Attitude Determination and Control Experiment (GADACS), Solar Exposure to Laser Ordnance Device (SELODE) and the University of Maryland Spartan Packet Radio Experiment (SPRE).
Other experiments onboard STS-72 include the Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Experiment (SSBUV-8) (previously flown on STS-34, STS-41, STS-43,STS-45, STS-56, STS-62 and STS-66), EDFT-03, Shuttle Laser Altimeter Payload (SLA-01/GAS(5)), VDA-2, National Institutes of Health NIH-R3 Experiment, Space Tissue Loss Experiment (STL/NIH-C), Pool Boiling Experiment (PBE) (hardware previously flown on STS-47, STS-57 and STS-60) and the Thermal Energy Storage (TES-2) experiment (previously flown on STS-69).
Get Away Special payloads include the United States Air Force Academy G-342 Flexible Beam Experiment (FLEXBEAM-2), Society of Japanese Aerospace Companies' G-459 - Protein Crystal Growth Experiment and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory GAS Ballast Can with Sample Return Experiment.
Endeavour's 10th flight also includes two 6.5 hour spacewalks by three astronauts to test hardware and tools that will be used in the assembly of the International Space Station starting in late 1997. EVA-1 on flight day five consists of Crewmembers Leroy Chiao (EV1) and Dan Barry (EV2) while EVA-2 on Flight Day 7 consists of Leroy Chiao (EV1) and Winston Scott (EV2).
Related articles
- Space science
- Space shuttle
- List of space shuttle missions
- List of human spaceflights chronologically
External links
- NASA mission summary (http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/missions/sts-72/mission-sts-72.html)
Previous Mission: STS-74 |
Space Shuttle program | Next Mission: STS-75 |