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 STS-97, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 22
Monday, Dec. 11, 2000 – 7:30 a.m. CST
Endeavour’s
astronauts were awakened this morning to Bing Crosby’s “I’ll
Be Home for Christmas,” beginning what should be their final day
in orbit as they prepare for a landing this evening at the Kennedy Space
Center.
Commander Brent
Jett, Pilot Mike Bloomfield and Mission Specialists Carlos Noriega,
Marc Garneau and Joe Tanner will move into their formal de-orbit preparation
timeline about noon. For the first landing opportunity of the day, Entry
Flight Director LeRoy Cain would give the crew a “go / no go” call on
closing Endeavour’s payload bay doors about 1 p.m.
There are two landing
opportunities in Florida today, the first beginning with an orbital
maneuvering system engine firing at 3:57 p.m. CST, and culminating in
a landing on Shuttle Landing Facility runway 15 at 5:04 p.m. CST (6:04
p.m. EST). In the event weather precludes a landing on that first opportunity,
a second landing opportunity exists one orbit later with a de-orbit
burn at 5:35 p.m. CST, resulting in a 6:40 p.m. (7:40 p.m. EST) landing
at the Kennedy Space Center. If that second opportunity is selected,
residents along the Gulf of Mexico may have a good view of Endeavour’s
plasma trail as it blazes through the atmosphere on its way home to
Florida.
Preliminary weather
forecasts, while basically favorable for landing, call for a slight
chance of showers in the vicinity of the Shuttle Landing Facility today.
Landing opportunities also are available at Edwards Air Force Base in
California, and flight controllers could decide to send Endeavour there
if conditions warrant. Edwards has three landing opportunities at 6:35
p.m., 8:09 p.m. and 9:46 p.m. CST.
Aboard the International
Space Station, now about 1,500 miles behind Endeavour, Expedition 1
Commander Bill Shepherd, Pilot Yuri Gidzenko and Flight Engineer Sergei
Krikalev are taking advantage of the additional space offered by the
Unity module.
With additional
power provided by the station’s new solar arrays -- delivered and
installed by Endeavour’s crew – the station crew now has continuous
access to that module. Early this morning, Shepherd provided flight
controllers with views of a cluttered module, and asked for the crew
to have time for some housekeeping on Tuesday. Shepherd indicated he
had elected to spend much of Monday setting up a new resistance exercise
device in Unity, and looked forward to opening the hatch in the docking
port vacated by Endeavour so that it can be used as closet space.
The next STS-97
status report will be issued after landing, or as mission events warrant.
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