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STS-111, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 12
Monday, June 10, 2002 – 6:30 p.m. CDT
The 10 astronauts
and cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station today continued
the expansion of the orbiting laboratory by installing the Mobile Remote
Servicer Base System (MBS).
The MBS was attached
to the Mobile Transporter on the Destiny Lab at 8:03 a.m. Central by
Expedition Five Flight Engineer Peggy Whitson and Endeavour Astronaut
Carl Walz. The two used the station’s robotic arm, Canadarm2, to maneuver
the MBS into position. Controllers on the ground then commanded latches
on the transporter to close, securing the MBS in place. Eventually,
Canadarm2 will “walk off” its current base location on the Destiny Lab
onto the MBS. The MBS is an important part of the station’s future Mobile
Servicing System, which will allow the station’s arm to travel the length
of the station to perform future construction tasks.
The astronauts
and cosmonauts on the Shuttle/Station complex, including STS-111 Commander
Ken Cockrell, Pilot Paul Lockhart, Mission Specialists Philippe Perrin
and Franklin Chang-Díaz, as well Expedition Four crew Yury Onufrienko,
Dan Bursch and Walz, and Expedition Five crewmembers Whitson, Commander
Valery Korzun and Flight Engineer Sergei Treschev, continued their transfer
of equipment and supplies to the station from the Leonardo Multi-Purpose
Logistics Module. As they began their Monday morning in space, the crewmembers
already had transferred 73 percent of the equipment and supplies.
Though the Expedition
Five crew has been in charge of station operations since Friday afternoon,
an official change of command ceremony between the two Expedition crews
took place this afternoon. The crew also reviewed procedures for tomorrow’s
second spacewalk of the mission by Chang-Díaz and Perrin in which the
two astronauts will hook up cables between the Mobile Base System and
the Mobile Transporter and firmly bolt the two components together.
At 4:53 p.m. today,
Endeavour completed a one-hour reboost maneuver to increase the station’s
altitude by a little over a mile. This is the first of three such maneuvers
that eventually will raise the station’s altitude by six miles. Systems
on both Endeavour and the station continue to function normally as they
orbit the Earth every 90 minutes at an altitude of about 240 statute
miles.
The next STS-111
status report will be issued Tuesday morning, or earlier, if events
warrant.
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