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Atlantis Astronauts Set For Major Space Station Work

STS-115 Mission Specialist Joe Tanner exits the Quest Airlock during preparations for the mission's first spacewalk. The spacesuits, which Tanner and Mission Specialist Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper will wear, can be seen in the airlock. Photo Credit: NASA TV
by Jean-Louis Santini
Houston (AFP) Sept 11, 2006
In a delicate robotic handoff, astronauts pulled two solar panels from shuttle Atlantis' cargo bay Monday and delivered them to the International Space Station for the first assembly work in nearly four years.

The three ISS residents warmly greeted the Atlantis crew after the shuttle docked with the space station, and the astronauts quickly went to work to prepare to install the solar panels that will provide a quarter of the ISS's power once it is finished.

After shaking hands and taking pictures, the astronauts used the shuttle's robotic arm to hand a 16-tonne truss segment with the solar arrays to the station's own Canadian-made arm. The segment will be attached to the station Tuesday.

The last ISS assembly mission was in November 2002, as the Columbia disaster three months later forced the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to focus on improving shuttle flight safety.

After two Discovery shuttle missions aimed at making space flight safer, NASA said it was ready to resume construction of the half-finished orbiting laboratory.

The 11-day Atlantis mission, which launched Saturday, has been billed as the most complex station assembly work to date.

After the segment is attached to the station Tuesday, Atlantis mission specialists Joe Tanner and Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper will venture out on a spacewalk to connect power cables.

Two other spacewalks are planned to install the solar panels this week.

US space officials were pleased with how the mission has gone so far -- particularly Monday's picture-perfect docking of the Atlantis with the ISS.

"It was very spectacular stuff today," said Paul Dye, NASA's lead flight director for the mission. "The rendezvous this morning was probably just about as perfect as a rendezvous I have ever been part of."

On its way to the ISS, Atlantis' heat shield went through a thorough examination in what has become a routine safety check since the Columbia accident that killed seven astronauts.

Before docking, Commander Brent Jett steered the orbiter into a backflip 200 meters (yards) below the ISS to allow the station crew to photograph Atlantis' underbelly.

On Sunday, the Atlantis astronauts used the orbiter boom sensor system, attached to the end of the shuttle's robotic arm, to closely inspect the wing leading edges and the nose cap for potential damage from debris during the launch.

Columbia was doomed by foam insulation that peeled off its external fuel tank during liftoff and pierced its heat shield, causing it to disintegrate as it returned to Earth with seven astronauts aboard in February 2003.

The Discovery missions in 2005 and in July focused on boosting safety to set the stage for regular shuttle flights to the space station.

NASA plans 15 more shuttle trips to complete the orbiting laboratory by 2010, when the three-shuttle fleet is to be retired.

Completing the ISS is central to US ambitions to fly humans back to the Moon and eventually to Mars.

The Atlantis crew includes Jett, Stefanyshyn-Piper, Tanner, co-pilot Chris Ferguson and mission specialists Daniel Burbank and Steve MacLean of the Canadian Space Agency.

The crew aboard the ISS are Russian Pavel Vinogradov, American Jeffrey Williams and German Thomas Reiter.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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New Hamilton Sundstrand Electrical Hardware Adds More Power To Space Station
Windsor Locks CT (SPX) Sep 12, 200
The second of four major segments of the Electric Power System components built by Hamilton Sundstrand, a subsidiary of United Technologies Corp., was carried into orbit by the Space Shuttle Atlantis on Saturday, Sept. 9 and soon will be installed on the International Space Station (ISS). Once connected and operational, the new power system components will boost the ISS electric power by 19,000 watts, enough to power a dozen homes.







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