|
STS-95, Mission Control Center
Status Report # 12
Tuesday, November 3, 1998 - 6 p.m. CST
The SPARTAN satellite was captured and returned to its berth this afternoon,
successfully completing its two-day solar science mission. SPARTAN Mission
Manager Craig Toohey congratulated the crew and flight control team
on their performance in executing the mission exactly as planned. Toohey
said that 30 percent of the science data already had been linked to
the ground and the remainder would be off-loaded at landing. SPARTAN
Scientist Dr. Richard Fisher noted that investigators were pleased to
have the satellite in orbit near a solar maximum cycle and that its
instruments had captured sought-after data on a solar mass ejection
event.
The rendezvous began with Commander Curt Brown firing Discovery's orbital
maneuvering engines to drop Discovery's orbit, accelerating it ahead
of the SPARTAN. After closing the distance, Brown and pilot Steve Lindsey
maneuvered Discovery in close as Mission Specialist 1 Steve Robinson
operated the 50-foot robot arm. With MS2 Scott Parazynski assisting,
Robinson directed the arm to a smooth grapple of the satellite at 2:45
p.m. CST. SPARTAN was placed in its berth in Discovery's cargo bay a
short time later.
During the final maneuvers, astronauts tested the Video Guidance Sensor,
a component of an automated docking system being prepared for use on
the International Space Station. Flight Controllers noted that the system
worked as planned.
Spartan will be used again tomorrow for data collection, once again
being unberthed from its payload bay cradle for a few hours so that
cameras can be pointed at a series of targets on the spacecraft. Those
cameras will test the Space Vision System that uses remote camera views
to provide a robot arm operator with the ability to view areas that
cannot be seen with the naked eye.
While SPARTAN operations captured most of the attention today, other
science operations continued aboard Discovery. Payload Specialists Chiaki
Mukai and John Glenn, along with Parazynski and European Space Agency Mission Specialist Pedro Duque, continued taking blood samples as part
of the Protein Turnover Experiment measuring muscle changes in zero
gravity.
Glenn also attached electrodes and a data recorder to himself which
record his heart rhythm on orbit, as part of an investigation of heart
rate variability during space flight. He also fed bone cell cultures
that are part of the OSTEO experiment, an evaluation of bone cell activity
under microgravity conditions, and he worked with the Advanced Organic
Separations (ADSEP) experiment, which provides the capability to separate
and purify biological materials in microgravity..
Glenn and Duque worked with the Astroculture plant-growing experiment
and with the MEPS (Microencapsulation Electrostatic Processing System)
that studies the formation of anti-tumor capsules containing two kinds
of drugs. Duque collected video data and photograph samples from the
Microgravity Glovebox (MGBX) which is used for investigations of colloids,
or systems of fine particles suspended in fluid. Mukai continued her
work with the Japanese Vestibular Function Experiment Unit (VFEU), which
holds two toadfish that are electronically monitored to determine the
effect of gravitational changes on the inner ear's balance system
All systems aboard Discovery continue to operate well. The next STS-95
status report will be issued at approximately 6:30 a.m. Central time
Wednesday.
|