|
STS-92, Mission
Control Center
Status Report # 10 Monday, October
16, 2000 - 6 a.m. CDT
With the first
of four consecutive space walks behind them, Discovery’s crew turns
its attention to today’s scheduled on-orbit construction activities
by Mission Specialists Jeff Wisoff and Mike Lopez-Alegria.
The two astronauts
are scheduled to begin a planned 6½-hour space walk about 9:30
CDT this morning to install an additional docking port – Pressurized
Mating Adapter 3 – and ready the Z1 Truss for installation of the
large solar arrays that will be delivered by the next shuttle crew in
late November. The first task for Wisoff and Lopez-Alegria will be to
release the latches that hold the PMA-3 in place and to provide Koichi
Wakata with visual cues as he uses the robotic arm to gently raise PMA-3
from its support platform in Discovery’s payload bay.
As Wakata maneuvers
PMA-3 to its new location on the Unity module, Wisoff and Lopez-Alegria
will release latches at the top of the Z1 Truss and prepare the work
surface of the attach point for the large solar arrays that will be
delivered during the STS-97 mission in November. They will then work
their way back to Unity to act as an extra set of eyes providing Wakata
with guidance as he attaches the PMA-3. Once the crew sees a series
of “ready to latch” indicators, Pilot Pam Melroy will use
a laptop computer to command latches and bolts to secure the PMA to
its new home on the Unity module, much as she did during the installation
of the Z1 truss on Saturday. However, today she will command only the
first of four stages of the bolting process to allow seals on both the
PMA and the common berthing mechanism on Unity to reach thermal equilibrium.
The final commanding will be done by the flight crew Tuesday morning,
after flight controllers in Houston confirm that the temperature variances
between the two seals are within acceptable limits.
In the ISS flight
control room this morning, the Power, Heating, Articulation, Lighting
and Control Officer – PHALCON – successfully completed work
with the two Plasma Contactor Units (PCUs) mounted on the Z1 truss.
The PCUs, which are designed to discharge electrical current on the
station and in its immediate environment, were launched with their valves
open to allow a continual discharge of xenon gas to prevent contamination
of the units. This morning, the PHALCON powered on and purged the units,
closed the valves and deactivated the PCUs. The units will be powered
on during the STS-97 mission once the solar arrays are deployed and
begin generating current.
Today’s scheduled
space walk will be the eighth space station assembly space walk, the
52nd EVA in the space shuttle program and the 91st by Americans in the
history of the U.S. space program.
The next Mission
Control Center status report will be issued at 6 p.m. CDT or as events
warrant.
###
NASA Johnson Space Center Mission Status Reports and other information are available automatically
by sending an Internet electronic mail message to majordomo@listserver.jsc.nasa.gov.
In the body of the message (not the subject line) users should type
"subscribe hsfnews" (no quotes). This will add the e-mail
address that sent the subscribe message to the news release distribution
list. The system will reply with a confirmation via e-mail of each subscription.
Once you have subscribed you will receive future news releases via e-mail.
|