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STS-108, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 05
Friday, Dec. 7, 2001 – 6 p.m. CST
A new trio of residents
arrived at the International Space Station this afternoon as the shuttle
Endeavour docked to the orbital outpost.
With the new Expedition
Four station crew of Commander Yury Onufrienko and Flight Engineers
Carl Walz and Dan Bursch looking on from Endeavour’s flight deck,
shuttle Commander Dom Gorie brought Endeavour to a gentle linkup with
the ISS at 2:03 p.m. CST as the two craft sailed over England. Within
minutes, Pilot Mark Kelly and Mission Specialists Linda Godwin and Dan
Tani began to conduct post-docking checks of the mechanical interface
between Endeavour and the station’s Destiny Laboratory prior to
the opening of the hatches on the two vehicles. At first, the shuttle’s
docking ring and the docking mechanism on the ISS did not align properly,
but after allowing the two craft to dampen their relative motion against
one another, the vehicles were hard mated for a week of joint operations
by the ten crewmembers.
On board the ISS
in their 119th day in space and their 116th day aboard the station,
Expedition Three Commander Frank Culbertson, Pilot Vladimir Dezhurov
and Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin watched as their replacements arrived
for the start of more than five months of orbital duty. The only other
visitors for the Expedition Three crew during its increment arrived
on the ISS in October to deliver a new Soyuz return vehicle.
The hatches were
opened between Endeavour and the ISS’ Destiny Laboratory at 4:42
p.m. CST, enabling the ten crewmembers to greet one another. Onufrienko,
Walz and Bursch will officially take over command of the ISS Saturday
afternoon from Culbertson, Dezhurov and Tyurin after transferring custom
made Soyuz seatliners and conducting leak checks to their spacesuits.
The crews now begin
a busy week of handing over station responsibilities and unloading tons
of supplies brought to the complex by Endeavour. Saturday's activities
will be highlighted by Kelly's use of the shuttle's robotic arm to hoist
the Italian-built Raffaello logistics module from Endeavour's payload
bay and attach it to a station berthing port. Raffaello will stay attached
to the station for most of the week while it is unloaded. The crews
will begin a sleep period at 10:19 p.m. CST today and awaken at 6:19
a.m. CST on Saturday. The next STS-108 mission status report will be
issued at about 7 a.m. CST Saturday or as events warrant.
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