| JOHNSON SPACE CENTER SPACE SHUTTLE STATUS REPORT #3 |
Dec. 21, 1999 12:30 a.m. EST |
The seven members of the STS-103 crew of Discovery completed a day of preparation
Monday for a Tuesday capture of the Hubble Space Telescope. During three days of space
walks, Hubbles capability to conduct astronomical observations will be restored and
some of its equipment upgraded.
Discovery's robotic arm and the four space suits the astronauts will use on Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday space walks, checked out with no major problems.
As the crew prepared for its sleep period, Discovery was 1,100 statute miles behind
Hubble, closing at a rate of 150 statute miles per orbit. Discoverys orbit had been
adjusted by firing the two Orbital Maneuvering System engines, mounted in pods on either
side of the spacecrafts vertical tail fin. That burn added 79 feet per second to the
orbiters speed. A subsequent firing of Discoverys smaller Reaction Control
System jets further refined the orbit by changing Discoverys speed by about eight
feet per second.
The pressure in Discoverys cabin was lowered to 10.2 psi at about 1 p.m. Monday.
This is part of the procedure to reduce the amount of nitrogen in the blood of
space-walking astronauts. Later they will breathe pure oxygen. Those steps are designed to
eliminate the possibility of nitrogen bubbles forming in their blood during spacewalks and
causing an attack of the bends, a condition that can affect deep-sea divers
brought to the surface too quickly.
A little after 8:30 p.m. CST, four members of the crew, Commander Curt Brown, Pilot Scott
Kelly, and Mission Specialists Jean-Francois Clervoy and Mike Foale, participated in an
on-orbit interview with three organizations CBS News, the Hal Uplinger Millennium
TV Network and ABS-PBS Millennium Broadcast.
On Tuesday Discovery will approach the space telescope with a series of burns to match its
orbit. The rendezvous' terminal initiation burn is to occur at about 4:30 p.m. when
Discovery is about eight miles behind Hubble. Brown and Kelly will maneuver the orbiter to
a point directly beneath Hubble, then move upward toward it. Clervoy, using the orbiter's
robotic arm, will grapple Hubble about 6:40 p.m. and place it on the Flight Service System
in the rear of Discoverys cargo bay. There, it can be rotated and tilted to enable
space-walking astronauts to better access its equipment bays.
Discovery is in an orbit with a high point of 367 statute miles and a low point of 352
miles. All systems are in excellent condition.
The next STS-103 mission status report will be issued at 11 a.m. Tuesday.