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Mission: STS-130
Orbiter: Endeavour
Launch Pad: 39A
Launch Date: Feb 8, 2010, 04:14 EST (09:14 UT)
Landing: Shuttle Landing Facility, Kennedy Space Center; Feb 21, 22:20 EST/03:20 UT Feb 22 (deorbit burn: 21:15 EST)
Main gear touchdown: 22:20:31 EST
Nose gear touchdown: 21:20:39 EST
Wheels stop: 22:22:10 EST
Orbital Altitude: 122 nautical miles (140 miles)
Orbital Insertion: 191 nautical miles (220 miles)
Orbital Inclination: 51.6 degrees
Distance traveled: ~5.7 million miles
Crew:- Commander: George D. "Zambo" Zamka; Pilot: Terry Virts; Mission Specialists:- MS1 Kathryn P. "Kay" Hire, MS2 Stephen Robinson, MS3 Nicholas Patrick, MS4 Robert L. Behnken.
"It's great to be home," Endeavour Commander George Zamka radioed after landing. "It was a great adventure." The shuttle made 217 orbits of Earth since launching on Feb. 8. Endeavour covered about 5,750,000 miles during the flight. - NASA
After undocking, shuttle Pilot Terry Virts moved the shuttle to 400 feet ahead of the station, and then flew a full circle around it while camera-wielding shuttle crew members and cameras in Endeavour's payload bay focused on documenting the state of the station with Tranquility and the cupola. - NASA
At undocking, the Shuttle's Orbiter Docking System will release its grip on the station’s Pressurized Mating Adapter 2, and springs will push the two vehicles gently apart. Virts will manually fly the shuttle to 450 feet directly in front of the station, and then fly a circle around the station while the shuttle crew members, and the cameras in Endeavour's payload bay, focus on documenting the state of the station and its new Tranquility and cupola modules. - NASA
As shuttle astronauts filed out of the forward end of Harmony, Williams formally rang the station bell marking their departure. Endeavour is scheduled to undock from the station at 6:54 p.m. CST today (00:54 UT, Saturday) and land at Florida's Kennedy Space Center at 9:16 p.m. Sunday. - NASA
The last transfers are first on the agenda for the remaining hours before hatches are closed between the International Space Station and Space Shuttle Endeavour, scheduled for approximately 1:30 a.m. CST on Friday. - NASA
President Barack Obama was accompanied by middle school students when he spoke from the White House with the crew members. Several of the students, in the capital for an engineering competition, asked the crew questions. Endeavour Commander George Zamka and Pilot Terry Virts began a 33-minute reboost of the station, using the shuttle's attitude control jets. When it was completed, the station's altitude had been raised by about 1.3 statute miles to an orbit of 219 by 208 miles. - NASA
Internal outfitting of the new station modules fills up most of the timeline for this extra day on orbit, which was added specifically to support this activity. Crew members will relocate the remaining system racks of the regenerative environmental control and life support system - both Water Recovery System racks, the Waste Hygiene Compartment, and the Oxygen Generation System - into empty rack spaces in Tranquility, and finish setting up hardware in the new cupola module. - NASA
Endeavour Pilot Terry Virts opened the windows one at a time early on Wednesday, giving spacewalkers Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick an early look into the International Space Station's room with a view that they had helped install. Behnken and Patrick wrapped up their third and final planned spacewalk, a 5-hour, 48-minute excursion, at 2:03 a.m. CST. They completed all of their planned tasks, removing insulation blankets and removing launch restraint bolts from each of the cupola's seven windows. - NASA
Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick will remove the insulation from the cupola's seven windows, and Patrick releases launch locks from the windows so Pilot Terry Virts can open the window shutters from inside the module for the first time at approximately 11:30 p.m. CST. - NASA
Behnken and Patrick began their campout in the Quest airlock about 5:40 a.m. The procedure, with the airlock pressure reduced to 10.2 psi, aims to lower their blood's nitrogen content and minimize the possibility of decompression sickness. - NASA
Endeavour's spacewalkers, Mission Specialists Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick spent about an hour and a half early in their day preparing for that excursion. Part of those preparations involved resizing another spacesuit for Behnken. The suit he wore on the first two spacewalk had some communications dropouts. - NASA
Pilot Terry Virts and Mission Specialist Kathryn Hire kick off the day monitoring the depressurization of the cupola module. This evening, while they operate Canadarm2, station Commander Jeff Williams will operate the common berthing mechanisms for the relocation of cupola from Tranquility’s outboard hatch to the Earth-facing side of the module. - NASA
Terry Virts and Kathryn Hire will latch onto the cupola with the station's robotic arm. They then will move the cupola to its permanent position on the Earth-facing side of the Tranquility node and then open the hatch. - NASA
Endeavour now is scheduled to land at Kennedy Space Center at 9:16 p.m. CST next Sunday, Feb. 21, after undocking from the station at 6:54 p.m. Friday. A new flight day 11, beginning Wednesday afternoon, will support moving two Water Recovery System racks, the Waste Hygiene Compartment and the Oxygen Generation System into Tranquility. That work had been on hold for repairs and test runs. - NASA
Spacewalkers Bob Behnken and Nicholas Patrick completed a five hour, 54 minute spacewalk at 3:14 a.m. EST. The pair completed all their scheduled tasks. - NASA
Mission Specialists Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick have completed the task of connecting the ammonia loops. They now will spend the remaining time outfitting Tranquility. - NASA
After Nicholas Patrick removed a quick disconnect cap, a small amount of ammonia crystals was observed. Based on conservative flight rules, Patrick's suit is considered contaminated, although Patrick reported that he could not see any crystals on his suit. - NASA
At 9:20 p.m. EST (02:20 UT), STS-130 spacewalkers Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick switched their suits to battery power, officially starting today's excursion outside the orbiting laboratory. - NASA
Mission Specialists Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick will hook up exterior fluid lines and do other work on Tranquility during their second spacewalk of the flight, scheduled to begin about 8:10 p.m. CST (02:10 UT). Early in their day, they configured spacewalk tools and worked on another spacesuit for Patrick, to resolve a power supply issue. The crew began an hour-long review of spacewalk procedures about 3:10 a.m. The spacewalkers started their overnight campout in the Quest airlock about 5:40 a.m. - NASA
Mission Specialists Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick will hook up exterior fluid lines and do other work on Tranquility during their second spacewalk of the flight, scheduled to begin about 8:10 p.m. CST (02:10 UT). Early in their day, they configured spacewalk tools and worked on another spacesuit for Patrick, to resolve a power supply issue. The crew began an hour-long review of spacewalk procedures about 3:10 a.m. The spacewalkers started their overnight campout in the Quest airlock about 5:40 a.m. - NASA
The doors leading to the final U.S. components of the International Space Station are due to open tonight when the crews of space shuttle Endeavour and the station begin internal outfitting of the Tranquility module and the cupola. - NASA
Tranquility was installed at 12:20 a.m. CST Friday over the Indian Ocean west of Singapore. Mission Specialist Kay Hire and Pilot Terry Virts used the station's Canadarm2 to pull Tranquility out of space shuttle Endeavour's payload bay and position it on the port side of the station's 10-year-old Unity module. Tranquility was locked in place with 16 remotely controlled bolts. - NASA
A highlight of space shuttle mission STS-130 is just hours away as the shuttle and International Space Station crews prepare to install the final components of the U.S. segment of the station during a spacewalk this evening. - NASA
Patrick and Behnken began their overnight campout in the station's Quest airlock a little before 7 a.m. CST in preparation for today's first of three spacewalks during space shuttle Endeavour's visit to the orbiting laboratory. They are sleeping in the reduced 10.2 psi pressure of the airlock to avoid decompression sickness, or the bends. - NASA
Spacewalk preparations and water recovery system maintenance highlight the work schedule for the first full day of joint docked operations by the astronauts on space shuttle Endeavour and the International Space Station. Behnken and Patrick will end their day preparing for Thursday night's spacewalk by camping overnight in the Quest airlock at a reduced atmospheric pressure. - NASA
The Space Shuttle Endeavour docked with the International Space Station at 11:06 p.m. CST Tuesday, delivering the Tranquility module and its new room with a view, the cupola. The shuttle and station crews opened hatches at 1:16 a.m. Wednesday as Endeavour and the outpost flew off the northwest coast of Australia. With the arrival of Endeavour's six astronauts, the station's population grows to 11 and its mass tops 1 million pounds. - NASA
At 10:05 p.m., after Endeavour arrives at a point 600 feet directly below the station, Zamka will command the shuttle to slowly rotate so that its underside is facing the station, and Expedition 22 Commander Jeff Williams and Flight Engineer Oleg Kotov will photo-document the shuttle's heat shield tiles. That imagery will be sent to the ground for study by specialists looking for any damaged tiles. - NASA
Much of the day for Commander George Zamka, Pilot Terry Virts and Mission Specialists Kay Hire, Stephen Robinson, Nicholas Patrick and Robert Behnken was devoted to inspection of the shuttle's heat-resistant tiles and reinforced carbon-carbon surfaces on the wing leading edges and the nose. - NASA
The astronauts onboard space shuttle Endeavour are into their first full day in space and on the way to install the final components of the U.S. segment of the International Space Station. - NASA
Commander George Zamka, Pilot Terry Virts and Mission Specialists Kay Hire, Stephen Robinson, Nicholas Patrick and Robert Behnken began their 13-day mission with an eight and a half minute dash to orbit to begin the pursuit of the orbital outpost, lighting up the central Florida coast as Endeavour arced to the northeast en route to space. - NASA
Managers officially have scheduled space shuttle Endeavour's next launch attempt for Monday, Feb. 8 at 4:14 a.m. EST. The Mission Management Team will meet at 6:15 p.m. Sunday to give the "go" to fill Endeavour's external fuel tank with propellants. Tank loading would begin at 6:45 p.m. - NASA
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PDT = (UT - 7 hours)
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