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INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION
STATUS REPORT #50
Expedition One Crew
Saturday, Nov. 4, 2000 - 3 p.m. CST
The International
Space Station's first crew members continued a busy and productive pace
of work today, activating and installing several key pieces of equipment
in the Zvezda living quarters as they began to settle in to life aboard
the orbiting complex.
Early today, the
crew -- Commander Bill Shepherd, Pilot Yuri Gidzenko and Flight Engineer
Sergei Krikalev - powered up the Vozdukh system in Zvezda, a regenerative
air-scrubbing system that removes carbon dioxide from the cabin and
vents it overboard. The system has been confirmed working well by Russian
flight controllers at Mission Control, Korolev, and the crew has discontinued
use of disposable canisters that had initially been used to remove carbon
dioxide.
The crew also installed
the Elektron system, equipment that uses water to replenish the oxygen
supply aboard the station. The Elektron system will be tested, but will
not be used as the primary system for oxygen generation aboard the station
for several weeks, until after the installation of United States-developed
solar arrays by the next Shuttle mission to the complex, STS-97 to launch
Nov. 30. The crew is now using about one oxygen-generating canister
per day to replenish the onboard atmosphere.
The crew also successfully
installed a compressor in the Zvezda air conditioning system for a test
of its operation planned to take place tomorrow. The air conditioner
provides some cooling in the module and also removes humidity. Even
without the air conditioner operating, the average temperature aboard
the station is about 75 degrees Fahrenheit and the relative humidity
is estimated to be between 40-50 percent. Other equipment that the crew
worked with during the day included setting up a Russian laptop computer
system that is used, among other things, to track the station's inventory
of equipment and supplies. In addition, the crew completed installing
a central post computer today, a system that allows laptop computers
to be used to monitor the operation of Zvezda systems.
Flight controllers
are monitoring a potential close pass to the station by a piece of space
debris being tracked by the U.S. Space Command. The latest predictions
show that the debris will pass more than 2 kilometers from the station
at about 12:43 a.m. Sunday. The current plan is to not perform any station
maneuver to further avoid the debris.
The crew was scheduled
to begin a sleep period at 1:30 p.m. CST and will awaken at 10 p.m.
to begin a fourth day aboard the station. Tomorrow is planned to be
primarily a day off for the crew. The crew is expected to maintain the
same sleep schedule on Sunday. The normal work schedule for Expedition
crews will call for five-day work weeks with weekends free. The ISS
is orbiting the Earth at an altitude of about 237 statute miles with
its systems in good shape.
Mission commentary
has concluded for today on NASA Television and will resume at 10 p.m.
CST Sunday. The Johnson Space Center Public Affairs Newsroom is closed and will reopen at 8 a.m. CST Monday. The next Expedition One status
report will be issued on Monday or as events warrant.
###
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