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Preflight
Interview: Scott Parazynski
The
STS-100 Crew Interviews with Scott
Parazynski, Mission
Specialist.
Q:
First off, tell us: Why did you want to become an astronaut?
A: I think
I've wanted to be an astronaut ever since I could walk and talk.
Just the dream of flight, the chance to explore. My father worked
on the Apollo program when I was very young and just always had
the notion of one day following in the footsteps of the early
pioneers of space flight. Had the posters on the wall and the
model rockets and just kind of never lost that dream.
Talk
us through the process that got you to fulfilling that dream.
Let's hear about your education and your career path that got
you here.
Okay. I
ended up growing up overseas quite a bit. My father worked with
the Boeing Airplane Company. And so, that took us to Dakar, Senegal;
Beirut, Lebanon; Athens, Greece; Tehran, Iran - so some kind of
faraway places, very exciting places to live as it turned out.
And then, I ended up going to Stanford University and Stanford
Medical School for my training, and while at Stanford Medical
School, I began working at the NASA Ames Research Center. One
thing kind of led to another. I began working on problems that
affect long-duration space flight and was able to then apply to
the space program as an astronaut candidate back in 1992.
Tell
me a little bit about your career as an astronaut here.
I've been
very fortunate since my arrival here in '92. Had three very exciting,
challenging space flights. The first mission was STS-66, back
in November of 1994, and we went up for an 11-day mission on Atlantis
to study the Earth's global ozone distribution and monitored a
number of different scientific payloads on that flight. Then,
on my second flight, STS-86, I served as the flight engineer on
the seventh Shuttle-Mir docking flight. So, I ended up going up
to the Mir space station at a very exciting time in its history.
I was able to perform a space walk with a Russian cosmonaut -
the very first joint U.S.-Russian space walk out of the shuttle
- and some other challenging interesting work while docked there.
My last flight was STS-95 with Senator John Glenn that certainly
generated a lot of public interest, looking at some of the corollaries
between the normal aging process and physiologic changes that
occur to all astronauts when they fly in space. We had a number
of other experiments on that flight as well, looking at solar
physics and material science and a whole host of other things.
Another thing that's a little unique about my background as an
astronaut is that I was slated to be a long-duration astronaut
aboard the Mir space station. In fact, I spent several months
learning how to speak Russian and then living and training in
Star City, Russia and was excited to serve as Jerry Linenger's
backup and hopefully would have served on a later increment. But
safety concerns arose that I was too tall to safely fit into the
Soyuz capsule in an emergency, so, as fate would have it, I wasn't
able to spend my five months up on Mir.
Despite
that disappointment, you've had a lot of great things happen to
you.
That is
indeed the case, yeah.
Any
particular people along the way that helped you get to be where
you are?
I guess,
are you asking in terms of role models and -
Role
models, right. Those that helped guide you along the way.
I guess
if I were to reflect on who my prime role models were to get me
where I am today, it would be great explorers and scientists -
folks like Jacques Cousteau and Sir Edmund Hillary - and then
the pioneering astronauts - John Glenn, [Alan] Shepard - and of
course the Gemini and Apollo astronauts that took us to great
places. I guess I can reflect a little bit about having the opportunity
to fly with John Glenn. It's an amazing opportunity and something
that I never would have imagined to grow up with a role model
and then ultimately follow in his footsteps and actually fly with
that person, Senator Glenn. So, it's a real honor and amazing
treat to be able to do that.
Now
you're assigned to another very important mission - STS-100. Tell
me what the goals are of this flight. What's the significance
of this new robot arm you're attaching to the space station?
Well, the
primary goal of this mission, first and foremost, is to install
and check out the new robotic arm for the space station. It's
an incredibly complex piece of hardware. The shuttle arm that
we fly for the space shuttle program in itself is a very complex
machine, but this arm - and I have a demonstration here - is capable
of actually walking over itself, kind of leapfrogging from point
to point. And, that gives us great capability for not only the
assembly of [the] space station but the maintenance and support
of space walking activities all throughout the space station.
And, if you look behind me here, you can see that the space station
is a huge facility spanning two football fields in area. [There
are] huge solar arrays that will need servicing and replacement
[and] other pieces of equipment that will need assembly and maintenance.
So, really, the - I call it the mechanical backbone of the or
cornerstone of the space station program - is what we're delivering
to the station. So, first and foremost, our job is to install
the arm and help the space station crew get it checked out in
preparation for the following flight, which is the delivery of
the airlock. And, I think as you're probably aware, each successive
mission in the space station program is critically dependent upon
the last. So, if we don't get our job done, then the next flight
can't do their job. Another primary activity on this flight is
the delivery of the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module, called Raffaello.
It's an Italian contribution to the program. And this will house
a number of scientific experiments, hardware racks for the space
station, as well as food and clothing and other logistics supplies
for the [Expedition] Two crew. And that's also a job that I'll
be associated with very closely.
Before
you can get all this important hardware up there, you have to
rendezvous and dock with the space station.
Yes, indeed.
Talk
through the process of that - how that's going to happen, and
what your role is in doing that process.
Rendezvous
with an orbiting vehicle actually starts on the launch pad. We
actually have to launch as the space station is almost going overhead
so that we can play a game of catch up over the next 2 or 3 days.
And, we're performing a number of burns with our orbital maneuvering
system engines to get in a matching orbit and then accelerate
to catch up with the space station. I'll serve as the rendezvous
navigator. Of course Kent Rominger, the Commander, will be at
the controls, and Pilot Jeff Ashby will be also monitoring propulsion
and other systems during the rendezvous. Chris Hadfield is another
key player in the rendezvous. He'll be using the handheld laser
to give us marks of our range and range rate. It's a device very
similar to a policeman's laser, and he'll just take pings off
of the space station as we get nearer and nearer. My primary role,
as I said, will be as navigator, and I'll be collecting a number
of different sensory inputs using radar. We have a laser system
called TCS that feeds information into my computers and then also
handheld laser marks that Chris will be taking. And, we'll kind
of synthesize all of those inputs and give that information back
to the Commander so that he can make the right inputs and coast
us up to a very gentle, smooth docking with the space station.
And, it's really an amazing feat if you think about [it] - to
start on the ground and play catch up with an orbiting vehicle
traveling at almost 18,000 miles an hour. And, at the moment of
docking you're within a degree and 3 inches of perfectly centered
on the docking structure. And, you're going at 18,000 miles an
hour, just like the space station is. Phenomenal technology.
After
you achieve this phenomenal, amazing thing you do dock with the
space station. What happens in the hours right after the docking?
Right after
the docking Chris Hadfield and myself will be controlling the
hooks that actually attach the two 200-ton vehicles together.
And so we'll be driving those hooks. We'll be doing leak checks
to make sure that there's no leak between the interfaces of the
two vehicles. Once that's completed, we'll do what we call the
"PMA shuffle." We don't want to open up the hatches
immediately and ingress the space station because Chris and I
are going out the following day for a space walk. We'll be at
10.2 pounds per square inch of pressure. Of course, sea level
is 14.7 pounds per square inch. Going to 10.2 a little bit earlier
in the flight helps us get rid of some of the nitrogen in our
system and reduces our risk of the bends when we go EVA the following
day. So we'll be doing this PMA shuffle, so-called, to exchange
gear from the shuttle to the space station and get some critical
equipment that we need the following day for our space walk. So,
we'll open up the vestibule between the space shuttle Orbiter
Docking System and the PMA and then actually go inside the PMA
and recover a Pistol-Grip Tool and a couple of other tools that
we'll need for EVA 1. And, we'll also deliver to the space station
a number of water containers and mail from home and fresh fruit
and other more critical supplies for them.
And,
it will be a couple of days until you see the Expedition Two crew
face-to-face. But, when you do see them, do you have anything
special you're bringing them? You mentioned fruit. Anything else?
We certainly
have a lot of surprises for them. Hopefully they can't see this
broadcast. But no, I think we have a number of things from home
- things that they really enjoy - foods in particular, music,
of course mail and videos from home, things of that nature that
we'll be delivering. And, we have a few things planned for on
orbit that'll be a surprise.
Now,
after the docking, the shuttle's robot arm is used to install
the robot arm on the space station like we mentioned, and the
first space walk begins - something you're keenly interested in.
Talk us through that day. What happens on the day of that first
space walk?
On flight
day four, one of the busiest days of the flight is also one of
the most exciting. We'll get up first thing in the morning. Myself
and Chris will be getting into our liquid-cooled undergarments
and putting on biomedical sensors and things of that nature. Meanwhile
upstairs, Jeff Ashby's going to be flying the robotic arm. And,
it's a very challenging task to, first of all, remove the Spacelab
Pallet that houses the space station robotic arm and a UHF antenna
that we'll also install. He has to pick that up and maneuver it
out in front of the nose of the orbiter and install it on top
of the Lab. The tolerances the arm has to fly are very tight.
Visibility is somewhat limited, but we think that with the various
views that we can command from the shuttle and using the Space
Vision System he'll be able to do this quite nicely. Once Jeff
has installed the Spacelab Pallet onboard the Lab, he'll ungrapple
the arm, back away and drive the arm back down towards the airlock,
where Chris and I'll be waiting to go. We'll have already done
our 100% oxygen prebreathe. We'll be fully suited up of course,
and once we have the go, we'll take the airlock to vacuum and
open up the hatch and go outside. It's six and a half hours nominally
planned - a very tightly choreographed activity with John Phillips,
our intravehicular crewmember, kind of as the quarterback of this
whole activity. Chris will be setting up the arm, getting a Portable
Foot Restraint out of, basically, a tool locker in the payload
bay, installing that on the arm. While he's doing that, I'll be
climbing up on the Laboratory module. I'll be checking on a slide
wire that runs alongside of it, verifying that it's intact. And
then, once that's complete, I'll switch my safety tether reel
on to the Laboratory. I'll go up to the Spacelab Pallet on the
top of the Lab and hook up four different connectors, and, these
are critical to the life of the station arm. Both power and data
and video lines run through these. Once all four connectors are
mated, we can then begin giving the arm keep-alive power. And,
that's something that the space station crew inside the Lab will
do on their laptop computers. Once that's complete, Chris will
be on board with me. We'll then move the UHF antenna from the
Spacelab Pallet, off of that and down around to the other side
of the Lab. We'll unbolt four bolts on the base of the antenna.
Chris will get another three on the shaft of the antenna. He'll
then lift it off of the pallet and ride around on the arm to the
installation spot. At that point, I'll receive the base of the
antenna soft dock it. Then I'll torque up the four base bolts,
and then I'll allow Chris to clear the area. And as he's doing
that, I'll swing up this UHF boom. And, it's a remarkable piece
of hardware, actually. As the boom deploys, the two antenna ray
domes also deploy in turn, and I think it's going to be really
an interesting thing to see on downlink for folks. Once that's
accomplished, another couple of bolts, an electrical connector
and the UHF antenna should be ready to operate. A few other commands
that the space station crew will be required to do inside to make
that happen. Following that, both Chris and I will head back up
to the Spacelab Pallet. And, there are a number of jack bolts
that have to be released to basically lessen the torque on bolts
that we call "super bolts," and they're almost 4-feet
long. Thus the name. And so each of these bolts [is] torqued down
to about 18,000 pounds. To achieve that, they have jack bolts
that add a little extra torque and keep the application of the
torque symmetric. So, we have to, in sequence, un-torque jack
bolts around the head of the super bolt, and it's a very methodical,
sequenced activity. Once all the jack bolts are backed off appropriately,
then I'll remove all four of my super bolts and hand those over
to Chris. And, he'll receive them while he's still on the arm
and put them into a device that we call the "quiver."
It's just like an arrow quiver you know, from Robin Hood or whatever.
But basically, [we] install the super bolts in four long slots,
and then, he'll go to his end and remove the super bolts on his
end of the Spacelab Pallet. I'll receive them and install his
super bolts in the quiver and close up the top of that, and we're
ready to proceed with the really critical portion of the EVA,
which is the assembly of the arm itself. What this entails is,
first of all, removing some expandable diameter fasteners. These
are bolts that, as you apply torque to them, they actually expand
in the hole and lock in place, so I have to get these out of their
launch position. There are a number of clevises that exist at
the hinge of the arm, I can show you on my mock-up here. The arm
in its launch configuration is essentially folded in half, and
right here is the hinge joint. If you can imagine, this entire
upper surface is folded back on to itself. I kind of liken the
arm to a spider or praying mantis. It kind of gracefully gets
unfolded and becomes a very powerful structure once it's completely
assembled. But once the expandable diameter fasteners have been
removed, I actually lift up the booms manually so that I can access
all four of the lower bolts. Then Chris will come by on the arm
and swing this entire upper boom up and over, and this also requires
a great deal of coordination between Jeff Ashby, who's driving
the arm, and Chris on the arm to make sure that he can reach during
the maneuver. And, it's also close to a number of reach limits
and singularities on the shuttle arm. So, it's going to be a very
slow and methodical activity to get Chris in up and over there.
Once that's completed, then I will free float all the way around
and install eight of these expandable diameter fasteners. It's
a key activity on the flight because, if we don't have all eight
of those installed properly, the arm won't have the proper rigidity
to do its job. So Chris, at the end of the arm, can actually wiggle
it, shake it - very gently obviously - to help align it so that
I can install the expandable diameter fasteners. Once they're
installed Chris will come back to the upper portion of the arm.
I'll be on the lower portion of it, and we'll torque up those
expandable diameter fasteners. And, basically that's the completion
of EVA 1. It's a lot of work all fit into a six-and-a-half-hour
EVA, but we've been doing really well in the pool. I have a lot
of confidence that things are going to go well in flight.
Is
that robot arm fully functional at the end of that space walk?
No, it's
not. In fact, at the end of EVA 1, it has keep-alive power, but
it hasn't really been brought operational. After we come back
inside, the space station crew has a number of activities to get
it powered up, to bring the video system operational, to get the
joints operational. And that's actually a primary activity for
the following day. Of course, the space station arm is still based
on the Spacelab Pallet, and what it really needs to do is be based
off of the Laboratory module. We're bringing that Spacelab Pallet
back home. Its new house actually is on the side of the Laboratory
module on an interface that we call the PDGF or Power and Data
Grapple Fixture, so the crew will basically fly the space station
arm up and over to the other side of the Laboratory module and
grapple this Power and Data Grapple Fixture. And that'll be the
preparatory steps for EVA 2.
Also
on this first space walk - you mentioned the UHF antenna. what
sort of communications are going to be possible once that's hooked
up?
The UHF
antenna that we're deploying is a great added capability. As we
currently rendezvous with the space station, we have to use a
VHF antenna, very similar to what's used in general aviation these
days. It's line of sight and has some limitations. It also requires
flying in an extra box of equipment every docking flight. Now
what we'll be able to do on rendezvous is just use our regular
UHF antennas in the orbiter to communicate during rendezvous.
It's also going to be the primary communication path for EVA communication
so that, when the station crew is outside doing an EVA, they can
talk to their IVA crewmember via the UHF radio. So a very powerful
capability.
You
mentioned earlier the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module you guys
are taking up there. Tell me a little bit more. Exactly what is
the MPLM and what are you bringing up on this particular flight?
The MPLM,
or Multi-Purpose Logistics Module, is an Italian built module,
as I mentioned earlier. Ours is named Raffaello. Leonardo and
Donatello are the other two flight models of the MPLM. On our
flight, we'll be bringing up primarily logistics and supplies
and scientific equipment for the space station crew, also, some
other hardware in support of the next assembly flight 7A and some
of the outfitting for the airlock.
What's
the process of getting that thing attached to the station?
The installation
of the MPLM requires use of the shuttle's robotic arm, which I'll
be flying both on the installation and removal. Installation occurs
on flight day five, and Umberto Guidoni, from the European Space
Agency, will be my trusted ally and will be helping me all through
the process. What we'll first do is grapple the MPLM in the payload
bay. Once that's successfully accomplished, we'll demate a rigid
electrical umbilical that we'll deploy out of the way. That basically
is used to control heaters and other electrical avionics during
a launch and landing. Once we've done that, we'll very slowly
and carefully lift the MPLM out of its V-guides - clear of the
shuttle's payload bay - and then reorient the MPLM so that it's
in a proper configuration high above the payload bay to dock with
the Node. We're going to be taking it up to the nadir port of
the Node on space station. And, using a number of different sensors
there, Umberto's going to be turning on the Space Vision System
using a series of black dots to calibrate the Vision System to
give us guidance to very precisely align the MPLM with the berthing
interface. I'll also be using a centerline berthing camera, which
has some other cues to fly out any attitude errors and help me
stay on track as I berth the MPLM on the side of the Node.
After
that work, you and Chris Hadfield are going to go back outside
for a second space walk. What happens during that second space
walk?
The second
space walk is to me perhaps even more exciting than the first.
Although perhaps to the downlink viewer it might not be quite
as visually captivating because of all the mechanical interfaces
that are going to be deployed - the UHF antenna and the space
station booms. EVA 2 is going to be very meticulous, delicate
work as we basically rewire the space station robotic arm. As
I mentioned earlier on EVA 1, the SSRMS is powered off of the
Spacelab Pallet, and it's really not in a position where it can
live for a long time. In fact, on flight 8A, the S0 truss gets
installed right where the Spacelab Pallet is located right now,
so it's not a permanent solution. We need to bring the power and
the data off of the side of the Lab. So, what I'll be doing is
reconfiguring wires underneath the surface of the Lab so that
the Power and Data Grapple Fixture that the arm is already attached
to can now transfer power and data and telemetry. If you can,
envision just a small kitchen table-sized area with about 24 connectors,
half of which are made of fiber-optic material. And, if you even
look at them wrong, they might snap or break. This is the kind
of environment that I'm going to be working in, and so, it's really
critical that I not get tunnel vision. I have to keep the big
picture, not just of the connector that I happen to be working
on but my tethers and tools that are suspended off of my suit
- make sure that they don't snag any of the adjacent connectors
or do any harm. So it's kind of an interesting challenge. Earlier
flights - 5A and 5A.1 - add additional cables on to this area,
so, by the time that we get there on 6A, the cables that I'm going
to need to interface with are at the very bottom, as luck would
have it. So, I've got to very carefully extract these sensitive
cables and bring them up and over the top. And so it's going to
be, as I mentioned, very slow and deliberate work, but I'm looking
forward to the challenge. Chris will be translating up to the
starboard port on the Node and recovering the early communications
antenna that was installed on flight 2A, STS-88. Essentially,
this is an antenna that's no longer needed. We now have excellent
communications capability on board the space station, and this
antenna's right in the way of the airlock installation on flight
7A. So, he'll be removing six cables, a couple of which will be
temporarily stowed on the side of the Node, and four others that
he'll actually bring inside the airlock with him at the completion
of the EVA. It's a box a little bit bigger than a breadbox. It
weighs about 100 pounds. It also has a metallic extension that
attaches it to the side of the Node that he'll retrieve and bring
back with him to the airlock.
Tell
me about what happens after that reconfiguration you do on the
side of the Lab.
I'll be
meeting Chris at the airlock to help him temporarily stow some
equipment, and actually, we had been working single string up
until this point on the EVA. We'll then proceed to the Spacelab
Pallet one more time. We have to disconnect the connectors that
I had mated on EVA 1 so that the space station crew can now remove
the Spacelab Pallet from the Lab Cradle Assembly where it had
been living for about 3 days. I'll also be going up on to the
Spacelab Pallet one final time to retrieve a video signal conditioner
- a VSC - and also retrieve a Portable Foot Restraint and one
tether and bring those back to the orbiter. So we'll be doing
just a couple of clean-up steps. And, once the electrical connectors
are demated, the Spacelab Pallet is free to be removed and essentially
put out of the way. It's going to go into an overnight park position
to give us a little bit more room with the shuttle's arm now to
allow me to ingress the arm one more time, and I'll be picking
up the DC Switching Unit - DCSU - electrical box that's an on-orbit
critical spare from the payload bay. And I'll be installing that
on the side of the Lab on the ESP. Chris'll meet [me] there and
help with some of the electrical connectors for that final installation.
Once that's complete, we'll be taking down the Portable Foot Restraint
on the end of the arm just temporarily [and] stowing it on the
side of the Lab, cleaning up tethers and calling it a day.
A
very complicated day.
Yeah. Another
busy day.
At
that point, you can test out this new robot arm the following
day. What happens during that? How do you test out that arm?
The arm,
of course, at this point has grappled to it the Spacelab Pallet.
So the space station crew - in conjunction with Chris Hadfield,
who will float on over to the space station while the arm is being
flown - will do a loaded checkout, if you will. The Spacelab Pallet
weighs on the order of 3,000 pounds, so they'll check out the
dynamics features of the arm with a load at the end of it, check
out the video systems on board, check out the performance of all
of the various capabilities that the arm has to offer. So it's
a three- or four-hour activity to shakedown the arm, if you will,
and then deliver it to a point where the shuttle arm can now pick
up the Spacelab Pallet. Chris, who hails from Canada of course,
will be doing the honors there. Kind of very nice symbolic thing
as well, to be able to, for the very first time, have both Canadarms
operational. He'll be grabbing the Spacelab Pallet offered up
by the space station arm and I'll back him up as his R2 and retrieve
that from the station crew. The station will then back away the
SSRMS and Chris will then berth the Spacelab Pallet back into
the payload bay.
You
also have scheduled a tentative third space walk. What will happen
on this third space walk and why is it tentative?
Well, anytime
you try to do something this challenging, things always crop up
- unexpected surprises. Having a third unscheduled space walk
for this flight really makes sense because, if a problem arises
on EVA 1 and we aren't able to fully get the arm deployed, we
might need to go out on a second space walk to have that happen.
And that, of course, trickles down to the other activities on
EVA 2 and getting it all accomplished in the scope of our mission.
So it makes sense in that regard to have a book-kept third EVA.
And you just never know what's going to happen in terms of space
station activities. If you'd recall back to assembly flight 4A,
at the very last moment, an extra task was added to the flight
- a potential probe that was added on top of P6. That added an
additional EVA to that flight. It's certainly a possibility for
that sort of activity to develop for our flight as well.
If
you don't need that third EVA, what happens? What do you do with
that extra day?
Well, we
certainly have a lot of transfer activities to keep us busy. But
I suspect we'll have most of our transfer activities done by that
day and, basically, we'll offer up our services to the space station
crew to help out with whatever maintenance or assembly activities
that they need us most. Those guys work very hard with a crew
of just three. And I know that, during the 4A docked time period,
the shuttle crew basically went over and volunteered, and they
were kept very busy during the one day that they had together.
After
the MPLM is unloaded, you've removed everything and moved things
back over on to it that you're returning from the station, it's
going to be then returned to the payload bay. What's the process
of that happening? [Is it] just a reverse of getting attached?
It's a little
bit different than the reversal. We won't have the same visual
cues as we did for installation. We won't have the Space Vision
System for installation. But Umberto will be will be there to
help as my R2 during the uninstall. And we use the centerline
berthing camera and an elbow camera looking at the berthing interface
there - Common Berthing Mechanism. And, very gradually, very slowly,
back it away after John Phillips has opened up the capture latches
on the Common Berthing Mechanism. Once it's safely clear of the
petals, we'll then roll the MPLM back down and drop it down into
the payload bay. The challenge on this day, I think, as for all
berthing activities, is just getting the right alignment in the
payload bay and the right attitude to drop it into the V-guides.
And once we get the alignment established, we'll just drop it
down into the V-guides and Umberto will drive the latches to secure
it for the ride home. Following that, we'll also deploy the rigid
umbilical - electrical umbilical - to deliver heater power to
the module.
After
that, you're ready to, then, the next day, say goodbye to the
Expedition Two crew and get ready to undock. Tell me about that
day. What happens in the course of that day?
Well, I
think it'll be the completion of a very intensive and exciting
docked timeframe. It'll be hard to say goodbye to Jim and Susan
and Yury. I know that from my experience, having been up on the
Mir space station. [I] understand that they've been up there for
quite a while and they have quite a long way to go yet in their
increment. It's always a little bit difficult to say goodbye.
Once we've made our last transfers and our last goodbyes, we'll
close the hatches, of course, depressurize the vestibule between
the two spacecraft, and Jeff Ashby will be at the controls for
the undocking. I'll be using the handheld laser, much as Chris
did for the docking activities. Chris and I will be operating
the Orbiter Docking System. I'll push the button to open the hooks,
and 2 minutes and 20 seconds later or thereabouts, springs between
the two vehicles will start a little bit of a separation rate.
And, as soon as we see that, Jeff will fire thrusters and begin
our separation from the space station. Meanwhile, Chris will be
monitoring all of the navigational sensors up front. And Kent
Rominger, the Commander, will be monitoring the undocking and
fly around from up front, as well as the orbiter systems. And,
there'll be people all around, of course, taking pictures and
"oohing" and "aahing" as we do this fly around.
The idea is to back out to 450 or 500 feet and then perform a
fly around of the space station, and it's our intent, on one quadrant
of this fly around, to get some really dramatic footage using
an IMAX camera. It's a three-dimensional IMAX camera mounted in
the payload bay. So Yuri Lonchakov will be controlling that camera
and, when the conditions are right and the space station is up
on the horizon as we're flying around, we'll take quite a bit
of footage of the space station.
You
have, as you mentioned there, a Russian crewmate on this flight.
You've had a lot of experiences with the Russians throughout your
career. Have those experiences helped you prepare for this flight
in any way?
Absolutely.
And it's above and beyond the language capability. It's understanding
some of the Russian culture and Russian engineering and spacecraft
systems. I think it's given me a much greater appreciation of
everything that goes into the space program. I've also been very
fortunate on every single one of my flights to have an international
crew. [I've} flown with Frenchmen on two occasions [and] Russians,
of course. I did a space walk with a Russian cosmonaut on my second
flight. And of course on this flight we have a Canadian and an
Italian astronaut. I've also flown with a Japanese astronaut.
And it's just a very exciting time to be in this line of work
to see the multicultural and international flavor of the way the
space program's become.
What
do you think about the growing role of cooperation in space?
I think
it's here to stay, of course. With somewhat more limited resources
but a more focused goal than perhaps we had in the Cold War, we
can focus on the things that are really important, things that
are going to improve the quality of life here on Earth. And so
working together with the Russians and the Europeans and the Japanese
and the Canadians and now the Brazilians, [we're] pooling our
resources and our intellect to improve the quality of life here
on Earth through the space station. We're also looking at the
edges of the universe, looking at discoveries in astrophysics
and so on. It's a very exciting time.
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