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STS-100, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 06
Sunday, April 22, 2001 – 3 a.m. CDT
Now docked to the
International Space Station, Endeavour and its seven-member crew are
preparing for the first of two planned space walks set to begin about
6:20 this morning to install the orbiting outpost’s Canadian built
robotic arm. Called Canadarm2, the high-tech robotic arm is the most
versatile ever flown in space.
Shortly after crew
wakeup, Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield and Scott Parazynski
began suiting up for the six and a half hour space walk that marks the
19th devoted to the assembly of the ISS and the 63rd in the history
of the shuttle program. Hadfield will be wearing a spacesuit with red
stripes around the legs, while Parazynski’s suit will have no markings.
John Phillips will serve as the in-cabin quarterback for the space walk
as Pilot Jeff Ashby and European Space Agency astronaut Umberto Guidoni
operate the shuttle’s robotic arm to install the new arm on the
outside of the Destiny laboratory.
Hadfield and Parazynski
will connect cables to give the arm power and allow it to accept computer
commands from the lab. They will unbolt the arm from the pallet, then
unfold its two booms and tighten bolts to make them rigid. The space walkers
also will install a UHF antenna on Destiny.
The Space station’s
Expedition Two crewmembers Jim Voss and Susan Helms will power up the
arm from the Robotic Work Station inside Destiny, checking connections
made by the space walkers.
A second space walk
is scheduled for Tuesday, and will focus on establishing permanent power
connections between the 57.7 foot-long arm and station and running it
through a thorough checkout.
The shuttle crew
was awakened earlier this morning by Canadian Stan Roger’s “Take
It From Day to Day” played for Hadfield in honor of the space walk
– the first ever by a Canadian. The Expedition Two crew was awakened
shortly after the shuttle crew.
Endeavour’s
cabin pressure will be increased to match that of the station during
the space walk leading toward opening of the hatches between the shuttle
and station Monday morning. Endeavour docked with the station at 8:59
a.m. Saturday followed soon after by entrance into the docking port
on the station to retrieve some tools for use during today’s space walk.
The shuttle crew left behind four water containers, fresh food, computer
equipment and IMAX camera film for the station crew.
The next status report will be issued Sunday afternoon, or as events
warrant.
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