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Space Shuttle Heading Home

Reuters is reporting that the shuttle has been prepping for a return to Earth, stowing gear and checking systems. Their expected return is tomorrow morning, around 9am EDT. From the article: "During tests on Sunday a leaking power unit for the shuttle flight control system appeared to be in good enough shape for landing and the jets that steer the spacecraft worked fine, NASA engineers said. The shuttle crew was still awaiting word on whether Discovery's heat shield had passed a final inspection performed on Saturday, but scans conducted with cameras and sensors throughout the flight had so far turned up no damage."

10 of 62 comments (clear)

  1. Detailed landing timeline and get your camera out by xmas2003 · · Score: 4, Informative

    SpaceFlightNow has a detailed timeline of the re-entry - not sure if it will still be dark enough to capture a glow across the Western US with the 9:14AM EDT first landing time ... but my guess is a LOT more camera's will be watching it come back into the atmosphere.

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  2. Re:Pointless mission? by fozzy1015 · · Score: 3, Informative

    You think they spent 12 days in space just looking at the thermal tiles? I know the main reason for the mission was to transfer supplies and a man to the ISS. Probably lots of other experiments as well. Unfortunately the news doesn't report on the mundane, just the dramatic, so you only hear about the possible problems with the tiles.

  3. Re:Pointless mission? by 9x320 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, that's the impression you get from the news coverage, but there are many goals of the mission you could read about on the Wikipedia entry. I've linked to a specific revision so you won't have to worry about coming across a vandalized version.

    I'll save you the trouble of clicking on it. Equipment delivered to the ISS:

    1 new astronaut on board the ISS, Thomas Reitner from the European Space Agency, to stay with the current crew for six months.

    80 C Freezer: This freezer is known as the Minus Eighty Degree Laboratory Freezer for ISS (MELFI). The French-built unit comprises four independent drawers which can be set to operate at different temperatures (image). Initially, temperatures of 80 C, 26 C, and +4 C will be used during on-orbit ISS operations. Both reagents and samples will be stored in the freezer. As well as storage, the freezer is designed to be used to transport samples to and from the ISS in a temperature controlled environment. The total capacity of the unit is 300 liters.

    The European Modular Cultivation System (EMCS) for biological experiments. This consists of a gas tight incubator in which there are two centrifuges, each able to carry four experimental cartridges. Two "Ground controls"--exact copies of the equipment and experiments--will be run on the ground. One will be in Europe and one at NASA's Ames Research Center.

    New oxygen generation system. This device is considered a test for an equipment design with potential for use on postulated future long durations to the Moon and Mars. The system will initially run below its maximum capacity, though it is designed for enabling the ISS to support a crew of six in the future. It will supplement the Russian-built Elektron system operating in the Zvezda module.

    New cycling machine for the ISS crew. A Danish built device, the Cycle Ergometer with Vibration Isolation System (CEVIS). (They have to exercise or else they'll dramatically lose bone mass due to lack of gravity, of course.)

    Replacement common cabin air assembly heat exchanger used to control the internal air temperature of the ISS.

    All of the above equipment is to be installed in the Destiny Laboratory Module. Additionally the orbiter and ISS computer printers will be swapped.

  4. Re:Detailed landing timeline and get your camera o by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you look at the maps you'll see they're not passing over the western US this time. Here's wishing them the best, even if not may people can see what's happening until the final stages.

  5. Unappreciated pioneers. by Datalanche · · Score: 5, Informative

    I, for one, applaud anyone with the bravery and skill to be a part of the space program. Also, it makes me sad that we never hear about any of the good progress anymore. All we hear is tile this, re-entry that. How about a news story about some of the unique experiments and projects have happened in space, or the international cooperation that goes into building the space station? It's also amazing how the media plays off images from Mars as a trip to the park. Shame on people. This stuff is paving way for the future. When we do screw up this planet for good, there's only one way to go and that's up. I guess since it's not all shiney lights and space babes like Star Trek, no one seems to care.

  6. Re:So no disaster. Any successes? by msparshatt · · Score: 3, Informative

    Now did/will the shuttle do anything beyond that? Any delivery? Any research? Any discoveries? Anything more than launch, orbit, landing?

    They also delivered supplies and performed vital repairs on the ISS. Also they dropped off a third crewman, who will spend the next few months on the station, and tested out a new extension to the shuttle's robot arm, which should make it easier to perform repairs to the underside of the shuttle.

    So it was more than just going into space, then landing again.

  7. Re:Operating a freezer in space... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The problem with space is that it doesn't have a temperature. Its a vaccum. Its not really "cold" or anything, its just undefined because theres nothing there.

    Nothing there to take the heat... So you can discharge superheated gasses or something. Until you run out of gas.

  8. Re:Operating a freezer in space... by Deadstick · · Score: 4, Informative

    You apply the heat to a black object exposed to space, and it radiates heat away -- unlike the "radiator" in your car, which actually dumps most of its heat by conduction to the surrounding air.

    A space radiator is very effective: it can get things extremely cold just by circulating the fluid without any active refrigeration (i.e, no compressor, no phase changes). The only hitch is that you have to keep sunlight off it, by a combination of sunshades and spacecraft attitude control.

    We tend to lose sight of how effective radiation is here on Earth where we have air redistributing heat, but the moon is a good example: its surface temp is about 110C on the dayside and -180C on the nightside.

    rj

  9. Re:Operating a freezer in space... by cyclone96 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Does anyone know how cooling is done in space?

    The payload racks in the US segment laboratory are water cooled, there are two internal water cooling loops in the laboratory that circulate through the racks. The internal water system dumps heat through a heat exchanger to an external ammonia loop, which gets rid of the heat through the radiators you can see deployed as some of the external ISS appendages. Basically, they are the big white panels that aren't solar arrays.

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  10. Re:Pointless mission? by Colonel+Blimp · · Score: 2, Informative

    Lets not forget, they fixed everything necessary to support the next two missions which each will add a 16 ton truss to the structure and new solar arrays which will give enough electricity to power the next science module that will be added. And, most importantly, the new tank foam changes have proven to work out well.