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STS-110, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 06
Thursday, April 11, 2002 – 4:30 a.m. CDT
Construction of
a framework for expanded research begins today as the S-Zero (S0) truss
segment is installed on the International Space Station. The truss will
provide support for the cooling and power systems necessary to attach
additional laboratories to the complex.
The Atlantis crew
- Commander Mike Bloomfield, Pilot Steve Frick and mission specialists
Rex Walheim, Ellen Ochoa, Lee Morin, Jerry Ross and Steve Smith - was
awakened at 3:44 a.m. by the University of California-Berkeley fight
song performed by the school band and “All Right Now,” performed
by the Stanford University band. Ochoa requested the songs be played
for crewmates Walheim and Smith who attended the rival schools.
On board the station,
the Expedition 4 crew, Commander Yury Onufrienko and flight engineers
Carl Walz and Dan Bursch, also awoke at 3:44 a.m. to an alarm-clock-like
tone. Both crews are ready to support the addition of the new segment
to the station.
Ochoa, assisted
by Bursch, will command the space station robotic arm, Canadarm2, to
grapple S0 about 5 a.m. Canadarm2 will lift the truss segment out and
away from Atlantis’ cargo bay and temporarily install it on the
U.S. laboratory Destiny. The Lab Cradle Assembly will provide a semi-rigid
structural hold until the truss segment is permanently attached during
four spacewalks this week.
The first spacewalk
is set to begin about 10 a.m. today as Smith, wearing the suit with
solid red stripes, and Walheim, in a solid white suit, float out of
the station’s Quest airlock. After initial setup procedures, their
tasks during the 6½ hour venture include attaching two of four
S0 mounting struts to Destiny, as well as an avionics tray that contains
power, data and fluid cables and an umbilical system connected to the
Mobile Transporter. If time permits, Smith will remove a launch support
beam and also go inside the truss to install two circuit breakers.
Ochoa and Bursch
will move Walheim on Canadarm2 to worksites throughout the spacewalk.
Bloomfield and Frick will use the shuttle’s robotic arm cameras
to take video of the spacewalkers while Ross guides them through the
outlined procedures.
The next STS-110
mission status report will be issued Thursday afternoon, or earlier
if events warrant.
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