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Space Shuttle Endeavour
Mission: STS-130 Lifts Off!
February 08, 2010
The U.S. space shuttle
Endeavour is on its way to the International Space Station.
NASA launched the shuttle from the Kennedy Space Center on the Atlantic
coast in Florida early Monday. A Sunday morning launch had been called
off because of poor weather at the launch site.
The six astronauts aboard the shuttle arescheduled to deliver parts to
the International Space Station for the last major construction
operation on the orbiting outpost, which is almost complete.
Endeavour is carrying a connecting node, Tranquility Node 3, and the
Cupola, a robotic control station with six windows around its sides and
another in the center that provides a 360-degree view around the
International Space Station.
Following this 13-day mission, four more shuttle flights are planned
before the fleet is retired at the end of this year.
U.S. President Barack Obama, in the budget he presented to Congress last
week, has canceled the space agency's plans to send astronauts back to
the moon by 2020.
The International Space Station has
been moving steadily closer to completion for the past several years.
But what house is complete without a utility room, a gym and a picture
window?
A computer generated
scene gives the perspective of a crew member looking through the Cupola
on the International Space Station
During the STS-130 mission, space shuttle Endeavour will deliver the
Tranquility node and its cupola, a dome-shaped extension from
Tranquility made up of seven windows. They will be the last major U.S.
modules to be added to the space station, and together they’ll help
clear out premium workspace in other areas of the station – as well as
offer a window on the world.
At 15 feet wide and 23 feet long, the Tranquility node will provide a
centralized home for the station’s environmental control equipment – one
of the systems that remove carbon dioxide from the station’s air, one of
the station’s bathrooms and the equipment that converts urine into
drinkable water, all of which is currently taking up space in the
Destiny laboratory. And there’s enough room left over to house the
station’s new treadmill and its microgravity equivalent of a weight
machine, moving it out of the Unity node where it’s in the way whenever
spacewalk preparations are going on inside the adjacent Quest airlock.
“It gives us a much needed addition to the house, so to speak,” said Bob
Dempsey, lead space station flight director for the mission. “We’re
getting to the point where we’re really cramped for space. You might be
surprised at that, considering we’re essentially the volume of a 747 and
we’ve been adding modules for the last couple of years. You might think
we’d be sitting around in a big empty house. But no – every inch is
really getting packed up there.”
STS-130 Commander George Zamka put it another way.
“It’s like exercising in the office,” he said. “This will be a more
logical organization, more focused.”
Though the node has an intensely practical function, there are still
fanciful aspects to Tranquility. For one, its name, which was chosen
with the help of a naming contest on NASA.gov.
“It harkens back to the Sea of Tranquility, where humans made their very
first tentative landing on the moon,” Zamka said. “They were only there
for a few hours, and it was at the very limits of what human beings
could do. From that beginning, we’re now putting up a node that will
house the majority of the life support equipment for the station, where
we’re going to have a permanent presence in space.”
But everyone agrees that the real scope for the imagination will be
provided by Tranquility’s 6.5-by-5-foot annex: the cupola. Its true
purpose will be to provide a true view of robotics operations on the
station’s exterior – such as those that will be required when the next
module, the Russian Rassvet, is added during STS-132 – and in that it
will be invaluable.
“Out the window is the truth,” Zamka said. “The video views that we use
now, you’re trying to stick together and have a mental image of where
things are. When you look out the window, you don’t have to imagine.
It’s all right there for you.”
But there’s no question that many people – including Zamka – are looking
forward to looking out of it for other views.
“Just the idea of providing this great view of the station and the world
beneath us is going to be pretty great,” he said. “That’s not what it’s
for, but it will be spectacular.”
The cupola will be like a mini control tower sticking out from the
Tranquility node, as opposed to the other station windows, which are
flush with the station’s exterior. Its seven windows – one in the center
and six around the sides – will provide the only views of the outside of
the station from the inside, in particular the Russian and Japanese
sections. And with the station just about finished, there’s more to see
out there than ever.
So, Zamka said, in addition to the robotic operations and Earth views it
will provide, it will also give us a good look at some of the space
shuttle fleet’s finest handiwork as the program comes to an end. And
that provides its own cause for reflection.
“We’ve
come a long way in human spaceflight because of the shuttle’s
capability,” he said. “We’ve launched and retrieved satellites, we’ve
done medical research and now we’ve built this huge space station. We’re
almost to the point of passing the baton from the space shuttle to the
space station in terms of what our human spaceflight experience will be
now.”
Kwatsi Alibaruho, lead STS-130 space shuttle flight director, said that
even with so much left to do in the program’s final five flights, he was
making it a point to spend some time thinking about the subject.
“It’s very easy to get into a routine, to lose oneself in the hustle and
bustle of trying to get the work done,” Alibaruho said. “But the shuttle
is a unique spacecraft. I find myself thinking a lot about how I’m going
to describe this time to my son when he’s old enough to understand.
There has never been an operational spacecraft like it before and all
indications are that it will be some time before there will be one like
it again. I find myself really appreciative of the opportunity I’ve had
to serve in this capacity.” |