- Source: STS-92
STS-92 was a Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station (ISS) flown by Space Shuttle Discovery. STS-92 marked the 100th mission of the Space Shuttle and Discovery's 28th flight. It was launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, 11 October 2000.
Crew
= Spacewalks
=EVA 1
Personnel: Chiao and McArthur
Start: 15 October 2000 – 14:27 UTC
End: 15 October 2000 – 20:55 UTC
Duration: 6 hours, 28 minutes
EVA 2
Personnel: López-Alegría and Wisoff
Start: 16 October 2000 – 14:15 UTC
End: 16 October 2000 – 21:22 UTC
Duration: 7 hours, 7 minutes
EVA 3
Personnel: Chiao and McArthur
Start: 17 October 2000 – 14:30 UTC
EVA 3 End: 17 October 2000 – 21:18 UTC
Duration: 6 hours, 48 minutes
EVA 4
Personnel: López-Alegría and Wisoff
Start: 18 October 2000 – 15:00 UTC
End: 18 October 2000 – 21:56 UTC
Duration: 6 hours, 56 minutes
= Crew seat assignments
=Mission highlights
STS-92 was an ISS assembly flight that brought the Z1 truss, Control Moment Gyros, Pressurized Mating Adapter-3 (PMA-3) (mounted on a Spacelab pallet) and two DDCU (Heat pipes) to the space station.
The Z1 truss was the first exterior framework installed on the ISS and allowed the first U.S. solar arrays to be temporarily installed on Unity for early power during flight 4A. The Ku-band communication system supported early science capabilities and U.S. television on flight 6A. The CMGs (Control Moment Gyros) weigh about 27 kilograms (60 lb) and provide non-propulsive (electrically powered) attitude control when activated on flight 5A, and PMA-3 provides shuttle docking port for solar array installation on flight 4A and Destiny Lab installation on flight 5A.
The mission included seven days of docked operations with the space station, four EVAs, and two ingress opportunities.
Over the course of four scheduled spacewalks, two teams of space walkers and an experienced robot arm operator collaborated to install the Z1 (Z for zenith port) truss structure on top of the U.S. Unity connecting node on the growing station and to deliver the third Pressurized Mating Adapter (PMA 3) to the ISS for the future berthing of new station components and to accommodate shuttle dockings.
The Z1 truss was the first permanent lattice-work structure for the ISS, very much like a girder, setting the stage for the future addition of the station's major trusses or backbones. The Z1 fixture also served as the platform on which the huge U.S. solar arrays were mounted on the next shuttle assembly flight, STS-97. The Z1 truss included many elements of the Communications and Tracking subsystem. The hardware included a Transmitter/Receiver/Controller (SGTRC) built by L3 Communications Systems-East in Camden, NJ. John Schina was the Chief Engineer of the ISS Program at L3.
The Z1 contains four large gyroscopic devices, called Control Moment Gyroscope (CMGs), which are used to maneuver the space station into the proper orientation on orbit once they were activated following the installation of the U.S. laboratory.
During the fourth spacewalk, astronauts Wisoff and López-Alegría tested the SAFER jet backpack, flying up to 50 feet while remaining tethered to the spacecraft.
Media
See also
List of human spaceflights
List of International Space Station spacewalks
List of Space Shuttle missions
List of spacewalks 2000–2014
Outline of space science
References
External links
NASA mission summary Archived 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
STS-92 Video Highlights Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pamela Melroy
- STS-97
- STS-2
- STS-8
- STS-7
- Uranium
- DWFM
- Daftar misi Pesawat Ulang Alik
- Leroy Chiao
- Daftar antariksawan Jepang
- STS-92
- Koichi Wakata
- Peter Wisoff
- Pamela Melroy
- Integrated Truss Structure
- 92 (number)
- List of astronauts by name
- NASA Astronaut Corps
- Simplified Aid For EVA Rescue
- Michael López-Alegría
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016)
Dr. Lamb (1992)
Annabelle: Creation (2017)
Casino Royale (2006)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.