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STS-101, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 05 Sunday, May 21,
2000 - 4:00 a.m. CDT
Flying five miles
a second above the Ukraine, Commander Jim Halsell gently pulled the
Shuttle Atlantis into port last night, flawlessly latching his 100-ton
spacecraft to the 35-ton International Space Station for a five-day
stay.
Halsell and his
crew performed the rendezvous and docking with the station by the book,
docking on target at 11:31 p.m. CDT Saturday. Although Atlantis is now
firmly attached to the station, the astronauts will not enter the new
outpost until Monday, turning their immediate attention instead to a
six and half-hour spacewalk to begin late tonight.
Astronauts Jim
Voss and Jeff Williams will perform tonight's spacewalk to install the
final part of a Russian-built crane on the station's exterior; replace
a faulty communications antenna; and install various cables and handrails.
Following the docking, Voss and Williams spent several hours this morning
preparing the tools and equipment they will use for the sojourn outside
and double-checking the spacewalk plans with the rest of the crew.
The crew also lowered
the air pressure inside Atlantis from the standard sea-level pressure
of 14.7 pounds per square inch to 10.2 pounds per square inch, a pressure
equivalent to that felt at an altitude of 10,000 feet on Earth. The
lower cabin pressure helps Voss and Williams purge nitrogen from their
bodies to avoid decompression sickness when they go to the 4.2 pounds
per square inch, pure oxygen atmosphere of the spacesuits this evening.
The International
Space Station remains in good condition, ready for the crew to enter
on Monday to start several days of maintenance and unloading of supplies.
As the crew's waking hours wound down early this morning, Mary Ellen
Weber, who will oversee much of the transfer of equipment, and Halsell
made some early preparations of the docking system for the eventual
entry into the station.
The crew will begin
a sleep period at 8:11 a.m. and awaken at 4:11 p.m. for a fourth day
in space, a day devoted to the spacewalk. Voss and Williams are planned
to begin donning their gear and suits at 6:11 p.m., leading to a predicted
exit from Atlantis' airlock hatch at 9:31 p.m. During the spacewalk,
Williams' suit will be distinguishable from Voss' suit by red stripes
around the legs. The astronauts are scheduled to conclude the spacewalk
at 4:01 a.m. Monday.
Atlantis is operating
well with flight controllers reporting no problems of significance for
any of the mission's activities. The shuttle and station are in an orbit
with a high point of 209 statute miles and a low point of 203 statute
miles, circling Earth every 91 minutes. The next mission status report
will be issued about 7 p.m. today.
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