Jonathan's Space Report No. 177 1993 Dec 8 STS-61 SPECIAL REPORT ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Shuttle ------- Endeavour was launched on mission STS-61 at 0927.00 on Dec 2. Main engine cutoff came at 0935.31; the OMS-2 burn raised the orbit to about 398 x 570 km at 1010 UT. Over the next few days a series of rendezvous burns were carried out: NC1 Dec 2 1455 Phase adjust NSR Dec 3 0811 Coelliptic burn NC2 Dec 3 0844 Phase adjust NH Dec 4 0234 Height adjust NC3 Dec 4 0322 Phase adjust NPC Dec 4 0403 Plane change NCC Dec 4 0535 Corrective combination TI Dec 4 0635 Terminal phase initiation MCC1 Dec 4 0715? Mid course correction MCC2 Dec 4 0729 Mid course correction MCC3 Dec 4 0738 Mid course correction MCC4 Dec 4 0749. Mid course correction By 0755 on Dec 4 commander Covey took over manual control of Endeavour and at 0847 Nicollier used the RMS arm to grapple the Hubble Space Telescope. The spacecraft were now in a 585 x 592 km orbit inclined 28.5 degrees. At 0922 HST was berthed onto the Flight Support System (FSS) last used for the Solar Max repair. At 0935 the RMS was detached from HST and by 1000 HST was on external power. As of this writing 4 of the 5 planned spacewalks have been carried out. EVA-1 on Dec 5 saw the replacement of the HST gyros and fuses. The astronauts had problems closing the gyro shroud doors on HST, probably due to thermal warping. On Dec 5 at 1325 the first solar panel was retracted; the second one stuck because it was warped. On Dec 6 the EVA-2 spacewalkers removed the dud solar panel; Kathy Thornton threw it into space at 0451 on Dec 6; it received the catalog number 22920 and designation 1990-37C. They then put the new solar panels on. The EVA ended with a delayed repressurization when Thornton's ears had problems re-adjusting to higher pressure. EVA-3, on Dec 7, saw the replacement of WFPC-1 with WFPC-2 and the installation of two new magnetometers. One of the magnetometer electronics boxes was discovered to be falling apart and Hoffmann removed loose parts of it. Next on EVA-4 came the removal of HSP and its replacement by COSTAR. Also on this spacewalk Akers took over the MFR (Manipulator Foot Restraint platform on the robot arm) from Thornton for an hour for the installation of a new coprocessor for the HST on board computer. Start End Duration MFR/RMS Free floater EVA-1 Dec 5 0329 Dec 5 1138 08:00 Hoffmann Musgrave EVA-2 Dec 6 0325 Dec 6 1010 06:45 Thornton Akers EVA-3 Dec 7 0333 Dec 6 1024 06:51 Hoffmann Musgrave EVA-4 Dec 8 0305 Dec 8 1003 06:58 Thornton Akers Note: I measure durations from airlock depressurization to repressurization; NASA's rule is a little different so they quote slightly shorter EVA times. At the end of EVA 4, Tom Akers had 29 h 49 min of EVA time by my count, making him the 6th ranked in all time spacewalk duration after Russian cosmonauts Krikalyov (36h), Manarov (34h), Artsebarskiy (32h), Kizim (31h) and V. Solov'yov (31h), and beating the US record set by Conrad on Gemini, Apollo and Skylab flights. Launches -------- Date Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. DES. Nov 2 1210 Kosmos-2266 Kosmos Plesetsk LC132 Navsat 70A Nov 5 0825 Kosmos-2267 Soyuz Baykonur LC1 Recon 71A Nov 18 1355 Rimsat/Gorizont Proton Baykonur LC81 Comsat 72A Nov 20 0117 Solidaridad 1 ) Ariane Kourou ELA2 Comsat 73A Meteosat 6 ) Weather 73B Nov 28 2340 DSCS III Atlas Centaur Canaveral LC36 Comsat 74A Dec 2 0927 Endeavour Shuttle Kennedy LC39 Spaceship 75A Dec 8 0048 NATO IVB Delta 7925 Canaveral LC17 Comsat 76A Reentries --------- Oct 13 Progress M-19 Deorbited Nov 1 Columbia Landed Nov 20 Kosmos-808 Reentered Nov 21 Progress M-20 Deorbited Current Shuttle Processing Status ____________________________________________ Orbiters Location Mission OV-102 Columbia OPF Bay 2 STS-62 OV-103 Discovery OPF Bay 3 STS-60 OV-104 Atlantis Palmdale OMDP OV-105 Endeavour LEO STS-61 ML/SRB/ET/OV stacks ML1/RSRM-36? VAB Bay 1 STS-62 ML2/ LC39B STS-61 ML3/RSRM-35?/ET? VAB Bay 3 STS-60 .-----------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 | | Harvard-Smithsonian Center for | | | Astrophysics | | | 60 Garden St, MS4 | | | Cambridge MA 02138 | inter : jcm@urania.harvard.edu | | USA | | '-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'