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STS-111, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 02
Thursday, June 6, 2002 – 7:30 a.m. CDT
As Endeavour closes
in for its linkup to the International Space Station tomorrow, the Expedition
Four crew aboard the complex will spend the day preparing for the arrival
of its replacements.
Aboard Endeavour,
Commander Ken Cockrell, Pilot Paul Lockhart, Mission Specialists Philippe
Perrin and Franklin Chang-Díaz and Expedition Five Commander
Valery Korzun and Flight Engineers Peggy Whitson and Sergei Treschev,
were awakened at 6:23 a.m. Central time by the song “Gettin' Jiggy
Wit It,” by Will Smith. The song was played for Korzun, who will
soon take command of the space station.
The Expedition
Four crewmembers – Commander Yury Onufrienko and Flight Engineers
Carl Walz and Dan Bursch – are in their 183rd day in space, their
181st day aboard the ISS. They will return to Earth aboard Endeavour
after six months in orbit on June 17.
In preparation
for docking Friday, Perrin and Chang-Díaz will set up a centerline
camera to help Cockrell with views of the station’s docking mechanism
during Endeavour’s final approach tomorrow and will test the orbiter
docking system ring. Cockrell and Lockhart will fire the shuttle’s
jets to raise the altitude of Endeavour and draw it closer to the station.
The maneuvers will bring the shuttle about 46 statute miles behind the
station by Friday morning.
Cockrell and Perrin
will also activate the shuttle’s robotic arm and use its cameras
to survey the contents of the payload bay, including the Leonardo Multi-Purpose
Logistics cargo module, the Mobile Base System and the replacement wrist
roll joint for the station’s robotic arm, Canadarm2, as well as
debris shields for the Zvezda Service Module. Chang-Díaz and
Perrin will install these components during three spacewalks scheduled
for the mission. Today, they will prepare their spacesuits for use out
of the Quest Airlock on the station next week.
Later this morning,
Cockrell and Chang-Díaz will participate in a live conversation
with Costa Rican President Abel Pacheco and reporters from two Hispanic
television networks. Costa Rican-born Chang-Díaz tied the human
spaceflight record yesterday when he launched on his seventh mission.
Astronaut Jerry Ross set the record in April during the STS-110 mission.
The next STS-111
mission status report will be issued Thursday evening or earlier, if
events warrant.
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