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STS-101, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 03 Saturday,
May 20, 2000 - 7:00 a.m. CDT
Atlantis' crew
spent a smooth day in space checking equipment in preparation for upcoming
activities: docking with the International Space Station late tonight;
a spacewalk planned for late Sunday; and the transfer of over a ton
of equipment to the station that will begin late Monday.
Atlantis' Commander
Jim Halsell and Pilot Scott Horowitz tested the navigation equipment
and flight controls they will use late tonight to rendezvous with and
then dock to the station. They also fired Atlantis' engines periodically
to adjust the rate at which the Shuttle is closing in on the station.
Atlantis is 430 statute miles behind the station now, closing in 30
statute miles with each orbit of Earth. Atlantis will continue that
closing rate throughout the day while the crew sleeps.
During an engine
firing Friday evening using both large orbital maneuvering system (OMS)
engines on Atlantis, flight controllers saw an indication that one of
two propellant valves for the left OMS engine may have failed to close.
The engine's backup valve did operate normally, and the engine remains
in good operating condition. However, as a precaution, the left engine
will not be used again until Atlantis is ready to deorbit at the completion
of the flight. Controllers are continuing to analyze the information
and are uncertain if the valve actually did not operate properly or
whether the indication may have been an errant sensor reading. The right
OMS engine alone can be used for large rendezvous engine firings with
no impact on the mission.
Astronauts Jeff
Williams and Jim Voss checked the spacesuits and equipment they will
use during the upcoming spacewalk, finding them in good shape. Three
suits -- one for Williams, one for Voss and a spare, which could be
used by either -- were checked out aboard Atlantis. Williams and Voss
were assisted in the checks by Horowitz, who will coordinate the spacewalk
activities from within the cabin. Later, fellow crew member Mary Ellen
Weber successfully tested the Shuttle's robotic arm. Weber will operate
the arm during the spacewalk to maneuver Williams and Voss between Atlantis
and the station. Weber uncradled the arm this morning and used it to
survey the Shuttle's payload bay. Later, Weber powered on the docking
system Atlantis will use to attach to the station and extended the system's
docking ring. The ring latches onto the station when the Shuttle makes
contact and is then retracted to secure the two spacecraft together.
The crew will begin
a sleep period at 8:11 a.m. and awaken at 4:11 p.m.. At 8:39 p.m., with
Atlantis trailing the International Space Station by about 50,000 feet,
Halsell will fire the Shuttle's engines to initiate the final phase
of the rendezvous. Just before 10 p.m., as Atlantis reaches a point
about a half-mile below the station, Halsell will take over manual control
of the approach. He will reach a distance of about 170 feet from the
station at 10:39 p.m. Docking is expected at about 11:31 p.m. Atlantis
is in an orbit with a high point of 204 miles and a low point of 199
miles, circling Earth every 90 minutes.
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