STS-84

This is a mission of the United States Space Shuttle

Space Shuttle program
Mission Insignia

Missing image
Sts-84-patch.jpg


Mission Statistics
Mission:STS-84
Shuttle:Atlantis
Launch Pad:39-A
Launch:May 15,1997 4:07:48.62 am EST
Landing: KSC May 24 9:27:44 am EDT. Shuttle Landing Facility Runway 33.
Duration: 9 days, 5 hours, 20 minutes, 47 seconds
Orbit Altitude:184 statute miles
Orbit Inclination:51.6 degrees
Distance Traveled:6 million km
Crew photo
Missing image
Sts-84_crew.jpg


Previous Mission:
STS-83
Next Mission:
STS-94
Contents

Crew

Launched and stayed on Mir

Landed and returned from Mir

Mission Parameters

  • Mass:
    • Orbiter Landing with payload: 100,285 kg
    • Spacehab-DM: 4,187 kg
    • Orbiter Docking System: 1,822 kg
    • Cargo Delivered to Mir: 3,318 kg
  • Perigee: 377 km
  • Apogee: 393 km
  • Inclination: 51.7°
  • Period: 92.3 min

6th Mir docking mission

  • Docked: May 17, 1997, 02:33:20 UTC
  • Undocked: May 22, 1997, 01:03:56 UTC
  • Time Docked: 4 days, 22 h, 30 min, 36 s

Mission Highlights

The STS-84 mission is the 6th Shuttle/Mir docking mission and is part of the NASA/Mir program which consists of nine Shuttle-Mir dockings and seven long duration flights of U.S. astronauts aboard the Russian space station. The shuttle previously Mir missions were STS-71, STS-74, STS-76, STS-79 and STS-81. The U.S. astronauts will launch and land on a Shuttle and serve as Mir crew members while the Mir cosmonauts use their traditional Soyuz vehicle for launch and landing. This series of missions will expand U.S. research on Mir by providing resupply materials for experiments to be performed aboard the station as well as returning experiment samples and data to Earth.

STS-84 will involve the transfer of 7,314 pounds (3,318 kg) of water and logistics to and from the Mir. During the docked phase, 1,025 pounds (465 kg) of water, 844.9 pounds (383 kg) of U.S. science equipment, 2,576.4 pounds (1,168 kg) of Russian logistics along with 392.7 pounds (178 kg) of miscellaneous material will be transferred to Mir. Returning to Earth aboard Atlantis will be 897.4 pounds (407 kg) of U.S. science material, 1,171.2 pounds (531 kg) of Russian logistics, 30 pounds (14 kg) of ESA material and 376.4 pounds (171 kg) of miscellaneous material.

Sixth Shuttle-Mir docking highlighted by transfer of fourth successive U.S. crew member to the Russian Space Station. U.S. astronaut Mike Foale exchanged places with Jerry Linenger, who arrived at Mir Jan. 15 with the crew of Shuttle Mission STS-81. Linenger spent 123 days on Mir and just over 132 days in space from launch to landing, placing him second behind U.S. astronaut Shannon Lucid for most time spent on-orbit by an American. Another milestone reached during his stay was one-year anniversary of continuous U.S. presence in space that began with Lucid's arrival at Mir March 22, 1996.

Other significant events during Linenger's stay included first U.S.-Russian space walk. On April 29, Linenger participated in five-hour extravehicular activity (EVA) with Mir 23 Commander Vasily Tsibliev to attach a monitor to the outside of the station. The Optical Properties Monitor (OPM) was to remain on Mir for nine months to allow study of the effect of the space environment on optical properties, such as mirrors used in telescopes.

On Feb. 23, a fire broke out on the 11 year old station. It caused minimal damage but required station's inhabitants to wear protective masks for about 36 hours until cabin air was cleaned. Besides Linenger, crew members aboard Mir at the time included two Mir 22 cosmonauts and a German cosmonaut, and two Mir 23 cosmonauts.

STS-84 docking with Mir occurred May 16 at 10:33 p.m. EDT above the Adriatic Sea. Hatches between two spacecraft opened at 12:25 a.m., May 17. Greetings exchanged between STS-84 crew and Mir 23 Commander Vasili Tsibliev, Flight Engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin and Linenger, followed by a safety briefing. Linenger and Foale officially traded places at 10:15 a.m. EDT.

Transfer of items to and from Mir proceeded smoothly and was completed ahead of schedule. One of first items transferred to station was an Elektron oxygen-generating unit. Altogether about 249 items were moved between the two spacecraft, and about 1,000 pounds (454 kg) of water moved to Mir, for a total of about 7,500 pounds (3,402 kg) of water, experiment samples, supplies and hardware.

Research program planned for Foale featured 35 investigations total (33 on Mir, two on STS-84, and another preflight/postflight) in six disciplines: advanced technology, Earth observations and remote sensing, fundamental biology, human life sciences, space station risk mitigation, and microgravity sciences. Twenty-eight of these were conducted during previous missions and were to be continued, repeated or completed during Foale's stay. Seven new experiments were planned in biological and crystal growth studies and materials processing.

Undocking occurred at 9:04 p.m. EDT, May 21. Unlike prior dockings, no flyaround of the station by the orbiter was conducted, but orbiter was stopped three times while backing away to collect data from a European sensor device designed to assist future rendezvous of a proposed European Space Agency resupply vehicle with the International Space Station.

Other activities conducted during the mission included investigations using the Biorack facility, located in the SPACEHAB Double Module in Atlantis' payload bay, a photo survey of Mir during docked operations, environmental air samplings and radiation monitoring.

Orbiter performance was nominal from launch to landing.

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Previous Mission:
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