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STS-101, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 11
Wednesday, May 24, 2000 - 6:00 a.m. CDT
Atlantis' astronauts
continued a smooth pace of work aboard the International Space Station
today, breezing through tasks ranging from standard home maintenance
such as replacing smoke detectors to successfully conducting the first
in a series of orbital boosts for the outpost.
Commander Jim Halsell
and pilot Scott Horowitz fired Atlantis' steering jets 27 times during
almost an hour Tuesday evening to gently lift the 35-ton outpost about
10 miles higher. The same process will be repeated again tonight and
on Thursday to boost the station by about 27 miles in total and leave
it in an orbit with an average height of about 233 miles when Atlantis
departs on Friday.
As has been the
case through much of the mission, the crew completed most jobs ahead
of schedule. Inside the Zarya module, Astronaut Susan Helms and Cosmonaut
Yury Usachev completed the installation of a third fresh battery for
the station. A fourth battery will be installed tonight. Meanwhile,
station controllers in Moscow completed charging the first of two batteries
installed in Zarya yesterday, and it is now operating perfectly. Controllers
are charging the second new battery installed in the station, although
the charging of that battery was interrupted briefly early this morning
by an unforeseen conflict that prevents conducting charging and battery
installation work simultaneously. The interruption halted the battery
charging for about an hour and a half, but the process is now again
under way with no problems. Controllers are confident the new battery
is in good condition and are revising plans to ensure no similar conflict
occurs as the crew is installing the final new battery tonight.
The crew also installed
10 new smoke detectors in Zarya, replacing detectors that had reached
the end of the lifetime for which they were designed to operate. The
astronauts replaced four cooling fans in Zarya for the same reason.
In addition, they completed the installation of new cabling for the
module's central computer that will allow that computer to be turned
on and off via a United States-built backup station communications system.
As the installation work progressed, the crew continued transferring
items ranging from exercise equipment to computer printers to the station
for use by future crews. Well over 1,200 pounds of gear have been moved
from Atlantis to the station thus far.
Tonight, Helms
and Usachev will install the final new battery in the station. Later,
Halsell and Horowitz will fire Atlantis' jets to perform the second
part of the three-part station reboost. Then the crew's attention will
turn to unloading various supplies from Atlantis and stowing them aboard
the station. The crew will take a short break from their work at 10:21
p.m. CDT for an interview with ABC radio news; KOIN-TV of Portland,
OR; and a Department of Housing and Urban Development educational group.
Atlantis and the
International Space Station are in an orbit with a high point of 219
miles and a low point of 212 miles, circling Earth every 91 minutes.
The next mission status report will be issued at 7 p.m. CDT.
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