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STS-102, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 16
Thursday, March 15, 2001 - 7 p.m. CST
The 10 astronauts
and cosmonauts aboard Discovery and the International Space Station
will spend another day docked to the orbiting science outpost to pack
for the trip home. Discovery’s STS-102 mission now will end with
a landing back in Florida about 1 a.m. Wednesday.
The crew was awakened
to the song “She Blinded Me With Science” performed by Thomas
Dolby and played in recognition of the laboratory outfitting and initial
station scientific work enabled by Discovery’s flight. As the crew
awoke, Mission Control informed Commander Jim Wetherbee of the mission’s
extension.
Discovery will
now spend almost nine days docked to the station, allowing ground controllers
and the crew more time to ensure all necessary items are stowed away
correctly aboard the Leonardo cargo module. Leonardo, filled with equipment
to return to Earth, now will be detached from the station and latched
back in Discovery’s payload bay early Sunday morning, a day later
than originally planned. Discovery will undock from the station late
Sunday night, spend Monday checking landing equipment, and return to
Earth about midnight Tuesday. Discovery is planned to fire its deorbit
engines at 10:55 p.m. Tuesday, descending to a touchdown at the Kennedy
Space Center, at 11:59 p.m.
The crews will
spend today continuing to pack items aboard the Leonardo logistics module
for return to Earth. In addition, all crewmembers will participate in
a press conference from the Destiny laboratory at 2:39 a.m., fielding
questions from reporters at NASA centers across the United States and
at the Russian control center outside Moscow.
Later, Wetherbee
will initiate a second hour-long gentle reboost of the station, using
the shuttle’s small steering jets to raise the complex’s altitude
by several miles. A third reboost session may be performed before Discovery
departs the station.
Discovery and the
International Space Station are in excellent condition as they circle
the Earth once every 92 minutes. The next Mission Control Center status
report will be issued Friday morning.
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