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STS-109, Mission Control Center
Status Report #06
Sunday, March 3, 2002 - noon CST
The Hubble Space
Telescope is secure in Columbia’s payload bay following its capture
at 3:31 a.m. central time today, as the two spacecraft soared 350 miles
above the Pacific Ocean southwest of the Mexican Coast.
Columbia’s chase
of the telescope ended with Commander Scott Altman and Pilot Duane Carey
manually flying Columbia to within 35 feet of Hubble allowing Mission
Specialist Nancy Currie to use the shuttle’s robot arm to gently grasp
the orbiting observatory.
With the telescope
safely in the payload bay, the crew turned its attention to retracting
the two large solar arrays that generate power for the telescope. The
motors that drive the two arrays had not been used since the panels
were originally deployed during the first servicing mission in December
1993. The motors performed flawlessly taking approximately five minutes
to retract each of the two arrays. The retractions were scheduled to
take place during orbital daytime to allow sunlight to adequately warm
the arrays prior to retraction.
The first in a
pair of new-generation solar arrays will be installed by John Grunsfeld and Rick Linnehan on the first scheduled spacewalk of the mission, which
is set to begin about 12:30 a.m. Monday. However, it is possible the
spacewalk could begin up to one hour earlier than scheduled.
The crew is scheduled
to wake up about 8 p.m. today, and within hours Grunsfeld and Linnehan,
with the assistance of crewmates Jim Newman and Mike Massimino, will
begin donning their spacesuits. They will begin the spacewalk by setting
up some of the tools they will use, before Grunsfeld and Linnehan, working
together, remove the old array, stow it in the payload bay and install
the new starboard side array. They will also install its associated
electrical support components, called a Diode Box Assembly. Mission
Control bid the crew goodnight just before noon today concluding a busy
and successful day culminating with the capture of the Hubble Space
Telescope. The next STS-109 mission status report will be issued Sunday
evening following crew wake-up or as events warrant.
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