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CREW:
Terrence W. Wilcutt, Commander; Joe Frank Edwards,
Jr., Pilot; Bonnie J. Dunbar, Mission Specialist; Michael
P. Anderson, Mission Specialist; James F. Reilly, II,
Mission Specialist; Salizhan Shakirovich Sharipov,
Mission Specialist; Andrew S. W. Thomas, Mission Specialist
(up); David Wolf, Mission Specialist (down)
LAUNCH
INFO:
Date: Jan.
22, 1998
Time: 9:48 p.m. EST
Site: Kennedy Space Center, FL
SHUTTLE
FLIGHT:
Orbiter: Endeavour
(OV-105)
Orbit Altitude: 160 nautical
miles
Orbit Inclination: 51.6°
Mission Duration: 8 Days, 19 hours,
48 minutes
MIR
DOCKING:
Docking: 8th Mir Docking
Dock Date: Jan.
24, 1998
Dock Time: 2:38 p.m. EST
Undock Date: Jan.
29, 1998
Undock Time: 11:20 a.m. EST
LANDING
INFO:
Date: Jan.
31, 1998
Time: 5:36 p.m. EST
Site: Kennedy Space Center, FL
PAYLOAD(S):
SPACEHAB-LDM Logistics
Double Module (FU2/FU3)
Mir-Docking/8,
(ADV-XDT, ADV-CGBA, EORF, MGM, RME-1312, SAMS VOA, VRA), MPNE, SIMPLEX,
CEBAS, TMIP GPS-DTO, HP, MSD, EarthKAM, OSVS RME-1331,
TEHM, DSO-914, CoCult, BIO3D GAS (G-093,G-141,G-145,G-432)
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SPACEHAB,
Inc.'s tenth overall mission and sixth mission
to Mir, launched on Space Shuttle Endeavour on
January 22,1998. This mission marked Commander
Terrence W. Wilcutt's third space flight and second
visit to Mir. He was the pilot on STS-79, the fourth
Shuttle/Mir flight, which saw the first exchange
of U.S. crew members on the space station: John
Blaha arriving, Shannon Lucid returning. Wilcutt's
first flight was STS-68 in 1994.
Mission Specialist Andrew Thomas was left aboard Mir for a planned four-month
stay. He replaced Astronaut Dave Wolf, who arrived at Mir in September aboard
Atlantis. Wolf returned to Earth on Endeavour along with the rest of the STS-89
crew.
Mission Specialist Bonnie J. Dunbar, a veteran astronaut, completed her fifth
Shuttle flight: STS-61A in 1985, STS-32 in 1990, STS-50 in 1992, the first Shuttle/Mir
docking mission, STS-71 in 1995 and STS-89 in 1998. The other STS-89 crew members
-- Edwards, Anderson, and Reilly made their first trip to space.
In addition to supplying Mir with the help of the SPACEHAB Logistics Double Module,
STS-89 also featured the recovery of the Optical Properties Monitor (OPM) from
Mir. This important experiment exposed material samples, mostly optical instruments
and coatings, to space conditions.
The OPM was installed on the exterior of the Mir Docking Module during a joint
Extra-Vehicular Activity, or space walk, by Vasily Tsibliev and Jerry Linenger
last April.
Much data had already been downlinked during Mir operations, but instrument recovery
yielded additional information from the exposed material samples in the OPM,
the materials used in the OPM itself, and data stored in non-volatile memory
in the OPM.
Only one more SPACEHAB mission to Mir, STS-91, is planned beyond STS-89. Future
SPACEHAB missions will concentrate on scientific research and on logistics support
for the new International Space Station (ISS).
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