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STS-106, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 23
Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2000 - 7 a.m. CDT
Atlantis' crew
turned its attention to checking shuttle systems and packing up equipment
for the return home scheduled for 2:56 a.m. CDT, Wednesday back at the
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The weather forecast calls for scattered
clouds, a light sea-breeze, and only a slight chance of rain off the
coast.
Winding down from
the hectic pace of International Space Station outfitting, which saw
the crew move more than 6,600 pounds of supplies into the station, the
crew of five astronauts and two cosmonauts spent much of today tearing
down their campsite. They’ll turn in for one last night in space
about 10 this morning and receive a wakeup call from Mission Control
at 5:46 this afternoon.
STS-106 Commander
Terry Wilcutt and Pilot Scott Altman tested the systems that will be
used during the return home, ensuring that all 44 of Atlantis’
thruster jets and flight control surfaces are in good working order.
The packing and
housekeeping chores high on the list of priorities included deactivating
systems in the pressurized Spacehab module that served as a cargo hold
for the equipment and supplies transferred to the station, and putting
away other equipment used in the rendezvous, docking, space walk, undocking
and fly around of the previous week.
With weather conditions
favorable in Florida, and nearly perfect in California at the backup
landing site at Edwards Air Force Base, managers elected to aim for
a landing in Florida only, Wednesday. Edwards would be considered for
Thursday, however.
For a touchdown
on the 3-mile-long Shuttle Landing Facility runway on the first opportunity
tomorrow, Atlantis would fire its engines to begin a descent at 1:50
a.m. A second opportunity to land in Florida starts with a deorbit burn
at 3:27 a.m. and ends with Atlantis touching down at 4:33 a.m. CDT.
Atlantis remains
in excellent shape as it leads the International Space Station by 140
statute miles. That distance increases by 5 miles with each orbit of
the Earth.
The next mission
status report will be issued about 7 p.m. today.
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