[sarex] Discovery Crew Prepares for Landing Wednesday
Arthur Rowe
azrowe80 at verizon.net
Tue Nov 6 09:46:00 PST 2007
SUBMITTED BY ARTHUR N1ORC - AMSAT A/C #31468
*Discovery Crew Prepares for Landing Wednesday*
Image Above: The STS-120 crew members are interviewed by reporters live
from Discovery. Image credit: NASA TV
TO VIEW IMAGE GO
TO:http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/main/index.html
The crew will spend today preparing for landing. Discovery’s first
landing opportunity is at 1:02 p.m. EST Wednesday at Kennedy Space
Center, Fla. Weather forecasters predict favorable landing conditions
once a cold front passes through late Tuesday night. The backup landing
sites at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and White Sands Space Harbor,
N.M., will not be considered Wednesday.
+ View landing ground tracks
<http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/sts120/news/landing.html>
Space shuttle Discovery’s crew left the International Space Station
Monday morning after almost 11 days of joint operations with the
Expedition 16 crew. The shuttle undocked from the station at 5:32 a.m.
as they flew over the South Pacific.
STS-120 Pilot George Zamka backed the orbiter about 400 feet from the
station and performed a fly-around to allow crew members to collect
video and imagery of the station in its new configuration. He completed
the final separation engine burn at 7:15 a.m.
The shuttle crew members used the shuttle robot arm and the 50-foot long
Orbiter Boom Sensor System to conduct a late inspection of the thermal
protection system.
During its stay at the station, which began Oct. 25, the STS-120 crew
continued the on-orbit construction of the station with the installation
of the Harmony Node 2 module and the relocation of the P6 truss.
The crew installed Harmony Oct. 26 and did four spacewalks at the
station. During the third spacewalk, the crew installed the P6 truss and
solar array pair in its permanent location outboard of the port truss.
The fourth spacewalk was changed during the mission so that the crew
could repair a torn solar array on the P6 truss. Following the
successful repair work, the crew was able to fully deploy the solar array.
Discovery also delivered a new station crew member, Flight Engineer
Daniel Tani. He replaced astronaut Clayton Anderson. Anderson arrived at
the station in June with STS-117.
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