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STS-102, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 08
Sunday, March 11, 2001 - 7 p.m. CST
The crews of Discovery
and the International Space Station will join forces again today as
hatches between the spacecraft are reopened, a change of shift aboard
the science outpost continues, and a cargo carrier is attached to the
complex.
Discovery’s
crew was awakened today by the song “Blast Off” from the animated
feature Scooby Doo and the Alien Invaders, played for astronaut Paul
Richards as a selection from his children. The shuttle and station crews
plan to reopen hatches between the two spacecraft at about 8:12 p.m.
today. They will remain open for about eight hours before they again
must be closed in preparation for a second space walk Monday night.
Just after the
hatches open this evening, the crew exchange will continue with Expedition
Two Flight Engineer Jim Voss taking up residence aboard the station
and Expedition One Flight Engineer Sergei Krikalev moving to Discovery.
With Expedition Two Commander Yury Usachev already aboard the complex
since Saturday, only one more crewmember switch remains to complete
the station’s change of watch. Expedition One Commander Bill Shepherd
will trade places with Expedition Two Flight Engineer Susan Helms Tuesday
night.
As the crews work
together tonight, moving gear inside the shuttle and station, Astronaut
Andy Thomas will use Discovery’s robotic arm to remove the Italian Space
Agency-built Leonardo Multi-Purpose Logistics Module from the shuttle’s
cargo bay and attach it to the station’s Unity module. Leonardo carries
more than 5 tons of equipment and experiments that will be unloaded
during the next few days before it is again detached from the station
and stowed aboard Discovery to return to Earth.
Tonight’s
plan calls for Thomas to begin lifting Leonardo from Discovery’s
cargo bay at 9:12 p.m. He will maneuver it into place and latch it to
the station at about 10:57 p.m. The station crew plans to enter the
cargo module at about 5:42 a.m. Monday to begin the unloading.
Discovery and the
International Space Station remain in excellent condition in an orbit
with a high point of 236 statute miles and a low point of 229 statute
miles. The next Mission Control Center status report will be issued
Monday morning.
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