STS-79

STS-79
Uppdrag?
RymdfärjaAtlantis (17)[1]
NSSDC-ID1996-057A[2]
Färdens tid10 dagar, 3 timmar, 19 minuter, 28 sekunder
Uppskjutning
StartplatsStartplatta 39A vid Kennedy Space Center i Florida
Start16 september 1996, 4:54:49.048 am
Landning
LandningsplatsKSC, Runway 15
Landning26 september 1996, 8:13:20 am EDT
Omloppsbana
Varv159 st[3]
Apogeum386 km
Perigeum368 km
Banlutning51,6°
Sträcka6,300 miljoner km
Dockning
RymdstationMir
Dockning19 september 1996, 03:13:18 UTC
Urdockning24 september 1996, 01:31:34 UTC
Tid dockad4 dagar, 22 timmar, 18 minuter 16 sekunder
Besättning
BefälhavareWilliam F. Readdy (3)
PilotTerrence W. Wilcutt (2)
UppdragsspecialisterThomas D. Akers (4)
Jay Apt (4)
Carl E. Walz (3)
Kronologi
Rymdfärjeprogrammet
Föregående uppdragNästa uppdrag
STS-78 STS-80

STS-70 var en flygning i det amerikanska rymdfärjeprogrammet med rymdfärjan Atlantis. Flygningen gick till den ryska rymdstationen Mir. Den sköts upp från Pad 39A vid Kennedy Space Center i Florida den 16 september 1996. Efter drygt tio dagar i omloppsbana runt jorden återinträdde rymdfärjan i jordens atmosfär och landade vid Kennedy Space Center.

Flygningens mål var att leverera utrustning och förnödenheter till rymdstationen, detta gjorde man med hjälp av en Spacehabmodul placerad i rymdfärjans lastrum.

Besättning

Väckningar

Under Geminiprogrammet började NASA spela musik för besättningar och sedan Apollo 15 har man varje "morgon" väckt besättningen med ett musikstycke, särskilt utvalt antingen för en enskild astronaut eller för de förhållanden som råder. Under flygningen spelade man även upp en hälsning från artisten eller från anställda vi olika NASA-center

DagLåtArtist/KompositörHälsning frånSpelad för
2"Duke of Earl"Gene ChandlerCarl E. Walz
3"Rescue Me"Fontella BassShannon W. Lucidhela besättningen
4"Hold On (I'm Coming)"Sam and DaveShannon W. Lucid
5"Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On"Jerry Lee Lewis
6"Cheeseburger in Paradise"Jimmy BuffettShannon W. Lucid
7"Another Saturday Night"Max QCarl E. Walz
8"Got Me Under Pressure"ZZ Tophela besättningen
9"Please Don't Leave Me"Fats Domino
10"Only Wanna Be With You"Hootie and the BlowfishShannon W. Lucid
11"Danger Zone"Kenny LogginsWilliam F. Readdy och Terrence W. Wilcutt

Se även

Referenser

  1. ^ NASA Space Shuttle Launch Archive Arkiverad 18 maj 2007 hämtat från the Wayback Machine., läst 28 juli 2016.
  2. ^ ”NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive” (på engelska). NASA. https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=1996-057A. Läst 20 mars 2020. 
  3. ^ Manned Astronautics - Figures & Facts Arkiverad 26 september 2015 hämtat från the Wayback Machine., läst 28 juli 2016.

Externa länkar

Media som används på denna webbplats

Mir insignia.svg
MIR Space Station Emblem
Sts-80-patch.png
This mission patch for mission STS-80 depicts the Space Shuttle Columbia and the two research satellites its crew deployed into the blue field of space. The uppermost satellite is the Orbiting Retrievable Far and Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrograph-Shuttle Pallet Satellite (ORFEUS-SPAS), a telescope aimed at unraveling the life cycles of stars and understanding the gases that drift between them. The lower satellite is the Wake Shield Facility (WSF), flying for the third time. It will use the vacuum of space to create advanced semiconductors for the nation's electronics industry. ORFEUS and WSF are joined by the symbol of the Astronaut Corps, representing the human contribution to scientific progress in space. The two bright blue stars represent the mission's Extravehicular Activities (EVA), final rehearsals for techniques and tools to be used in assembly of the International Space Station (ISS). Surrounding Columbia is a constellation of 16 stars, one for each day of the mission, representing the stellar talents of the ground and flight teams that share the goal of expanding knowledge through a permanent human presence in space.
Sts-78-patch.png

The STS-78 patch links past with present to tell the story of its mission and science through a design imbued with the strength and vitality of the 2-dimensional art of North America's northwest coast Indians. Central to the design is the space Shuttle whose bold lines and curves evoke the Indian image for the eagle, a native American symbol of power and prestige as well as the national symbol of the United States. The wings of the Shuttle suggest the wings of the eagle whose feathers, indicative of peace and friendship in Indian tradition, are captured by the U forms, a characteristic feature of Northwest coast Indian art. The nose of the Shuttle is the strong downward curve of the eagle's beak, and the Shuttle's forward windows, the eagle's eyes, represented through the tapered S forms again typical of this Indian art form.

The basic black and red atoms orbiting the mission number recall the original NASA emblem while beneath, utilizing Indian ovoid forms, the major mission scientific experiment package LMS (Life and Materials Sciences) housed in the Shuttle's cargo bay is depicted in a manner reminiscent of totem-pole art. This image of a bird poised for flight, so common to Indian art, is counterpointed by an equally familiar Tsimshian Indian symbol, a pulsating sun with long hyperbolic rays, the symbol of life. Within each of these rays are now encased crystals, the products of this mission's 3 major, high-temperature materials processing furnaces. And as the sky in Indian lore is a lovely open country, home of the Sun Chief and accessible to travelers through a hole in the western horizon, so too, space is a vast and beckoning landscape for explorers launched beyond the horizon.

Beneath the Tsimshian sun, the colors of the earth limb are appropriately enclosed by a red border representing life to the Northwest coast Indians. The Indian colors of red, navy blue, white, and black pervade the STS-78 path. To the right of the Shuttle-eagle, the constellation Delphinus recalls the dolphin, friend of ancient sailors and, now perhaps too, of the 9 space voyagers suggested by this constellation's blaze of 9 stars. The patch simultaneously celebrates international unity fostered by the Olympic spirit of sports competition at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A. Deliberately poised over the city of Atlanta, the Space Shuttle glows at its base with the 5 official Olympic rings in the 5 Olympic colors which can also be found throughout the patch, rings and colors which signify the 5 continents of the earth. This is an international mission and for the first time in NASA patch history, astronauts have dispensed with identifying country flags beneath their names to celebrate the spirit of international unity so characteristic of this flight.
STS-79 crew.jpg
The crew assigned to the STS-79 mission included (seated front left to right) Jerome (Jay) Apt, mission specialist; Terrence W. Wilcutt, pilot; William F. Readdy, commander; Thomas D. Akers, and Carl E. Walz, both mission specialists. On the back row (left to right) are mission specialists Shannon W. Lucid, and John E. Blaha. Launched aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis on September 16, 1996 at 4:54:49 am (EDT), the STS-79 mission marked the fourth U.S. Space Shuttle-Russian Space Station Mir docking, the second flight of the SPACEHAB module in support of Shuttle-Mir activities and the first flight of the SPACEHAB Double Module Configuration.
STS-79 patch.svg
Emblem of Nasa's STS-79 mission.
Vostok spacecraft replica.jpg
Författare/Upphovsman: Pascal (Flickr user: pasukaru76), Licens: CC0
Vostok spacecraft replica at the Technik Museum Speyer, Germany.