![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/TITLES/DOCUMENTS.JPG) |
Mir-23 Weekly Reports
Mir-23 - Week of March 7, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
As the continuous American presence in space moves past 350 days, the
cast on the Russian space station Mir has changed once again. Last weekend
one set of Russian cosmonauts completed their six months in space and
returned to Earth, leaving American astronaut Jerry Linenger to continue
his four-month tour of duty with a new set of colleagues.
Mir became home to six space travelers on February 12th, when Mir-23
commander Vasily Tsibliev, flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin and German
researcher Reinhold Ewald were welcomed onboard by Linenger and the
Mir-22 crew. With the operational handover and Ewald's science program
completed, he joined Mir-22 commander Valeri Korzun and flight engineer
Alexander Kaleri for the ride back to Earth.
On Saturday Korzun, Kaleri and Ewald entered the Soyuz capsule which
brought those two Russians to the station last August; at 9:25 p.m.
Houston time their capsule undocked from the station, and it made a
soft landing in central Asia a little more than three hours later -
12:44 a.m. central time on Sunday. For Ewald, his first spaceflight
ended after three weeks in space; for Korzun and Kaleri, 197 days in
space, and more than 194 days onboard the orbiting Russian outpost,
the last seven weeks as crewmates of Jerry Linenger.
This week Tsibliev, Lazutkin and Linenger have been settling into their
new routine on orbit while troubleshooting the backup oxygen generating
system in the Kvant-2 module, which has been operating sporadically
since early Wednesday. The system, which extracts breathing oxygen from
potassium hydroxide-enriched water and vents the hydrogen overboard,
automatically shut down early Wednesday due to an excessive build-up
of air in the apparatus.
The Elektron system was restarted after replacement of a pressurized
fluid unit, but has since shut down again. Today the crewmembers activated
another oxygen-generating system in the Kvant-1 module, and they are
scheduled to activate a number of oxygen-generating candles throughout
the station tomorrow.
Russian flight controllers say this situation has had no impact on
the health of the crewmembers nor on any station operations, and that
they expect to be able to restore the system to normal operation. They
also note that the Mir contains a sufficient volume of oxygen to support
its three residents for about five days without the Elektron system
operating, and that there is a two-month supply of oxygen-generating
candles onboard. Any new parts required for repair will be sent to
the Mir on the next Progress re-supply vehicle, scheduled to arrive
in early April.
Meanwhile, ground controllers at Mission Control in Korolev, outside
Moscow, have decided not to make another attempt to redock an empty
Progress vessel to the Kvant-1 docking port. That empty supply ship
was undocked and moved to a parking orbit in early February to open
a docking port for the Soyuz capsule carrying Tsibliev, Lazutkin and
Ewald.
The attempt to redock the Progress to the station was unsuccessful
this week, and Russian mission controllers have chosen not to make another
attempt in order to protect the propellant supply necessary to de-orbit
the craft; that is now scheduled for next Tuesday. They had hoped to
use the empty ship to shield the Kvant-1 docking port from exposure
to the sun, but will maneuver the station to accomplish the same goal.
The next Progress, filled with supplies, is now scheduled to arrive
at the Mir around April 8th.
The three men onboard the Mir now arrived there with a range of experience
in space: Tsibliev previously spent almost 200 days onboard the Mir;
Linenger had 11 days of in-flight experience from his 1994 shuttle mission
prior to his launch in January; this is Lazutkin's first trip to Earth
orbit.
Tsibliev and Lazutkin, now 26 days into their six-month mission, are
scheduled to remain onboard the station until this coming August. Today
is Linenger's 55th day in space since his launch in January, and that
extends the continuous American presence in space to 351 days today
since the launch of the shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-76 with Shannon
Lucid onboard in March 1996.
Linenger's tour is slated to run into the month of May, when he is
to be succeeded by astronaut Mike Foale, who is preparing for his tour
at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia, outside
Moscow. This week, Foale and his backup, Jim Voss, concentrated on Mir
payloads and ham radio training along with Russian language classes.
The two astronauts slated to follow Foale to the Mir, Wendy Lawrence
and David Wolf, also focused on payloads and language as well as instruction
in the Mir and Soyuz life support systems.
An audio-only interview with Jerry Linenger is scheduled for Thursday,
March 13 at 12:59 p.m. CST (18:59 GMT); National Public Radio and NASA
TV will carry the event.
Current plans call for the next Progress re-supply vessel, carrying
food, clothing and other supplies for the crew of the space station
Mir, to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakstan in central
Asia on April 6. If that planned launch date is met, the Progress should
dock to the Mir station on Tuesday, April 8.
Then in mid-April, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and astronaut Jerry
Linenger are tentatively scheduled to conduct their planned spacewalk,
installing two experiment modules and removing two others from the outside
of the Russian space station. That spacewalk by Linenger will mark the
first time an American has ever conducted a spacewalk from the Russian
station wearing a Russian spacesuit.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/WELCOME-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/BOOK-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/FEATURES-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/CD-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/PHOTOS-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/VIDEOS-OFF.GIF)
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/NAV-TOOLS/DIAGRAMS-OFF.GIF)
Back
to
Mir
Increment
Summaries
|
__________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of March 14, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
As America's continuous presence in space nears its first anniversary,
the four-month mission of American astronaut Jerry Linenger to the Russian
space station Mir has reached the halfway point. Today is Linenger's
62nd day in space since his launch on the shuttle Atlantis January 12;
Atlantis is targeted for launch again on May 15, to retrieve Linenger
and deliver astronaut Mike Foale to continue the program of research
into how the human body responds to long periods in the absence of gravity.
Linenger's crewmates, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer
Aleksandr Lazutkin, are in the 33rd day of their six-month mission today;
this past week all three have been busy with a variety of on-going life
and microgravity science experiments while seeing to the maintenance
of their orbiting home. That has included daily activity to maintain
the proper oxygen content of the Mir's environment while Russian flight
controllers plan their repair strategy for the station's primary oxygen-generation
system, which has been offline for a week.
The Elektron system uses the process known as electrolysis to separate
oxygen from onboard waste water and return it to the cabin atmosphere
for the crew to breathe; the system shut itself down last week due to
an excessive build-up of air within the system.
As Jerry Linenger begins the second half of his four-month tour onboard the Mir, and prepares to mark the first full year of the continuous
American presence in space a week from tomorrow, the Americans training
to succeed him and extend the American presence onboard the Mir into
May of 1998 have been preparing for their missions at the Gagarin Cosmonaut
Training Center, in Star City, Russia, outside Moscow.
Astronaut Mike Foale is in the final few weeks of his Mir and Soyuz
training in Star City before returning to the Johnson Space Center for
training with his STS-84 crewmates prior to their targeted launch to
the Mir in mid-May.
Astronaut Wendy Lawrence is scheduled to follow Foale to the Mir four
months later, scheduled to launch on STS-86 in September. Her tour of
duty would stretch into 1998, when astronaut David Wolf is targeted
to launch on the shuttle Discovery next January to begin his four months
onboard the Mir.
Also training in Star City is American astronaut Bill Shepherd; he
is studying the Russian language and Soyuz systems as he works with
two Russian crewmates preparing for the first mission to live and work
on the International Space Station.
A week from tomorrow, March 22, is the first anniversary of the launch
of mission STS-76, which brought astronaut Shannon Lucid to the Mir Space Station and initiated a continuous American presence in space.
The launch of the next Progress re-supply vessel, carrying food, fuel,
clothing, and maintenance equipment to the Mir Space Station, is tentatively
targeted for Sunday, April 6; that would mean a docking of the Progress
to the orbiting Russian outpost on Tuesday, April 8.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_________________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of March 21, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Fighting Fire Aboard
Mir - Jerry Linenger describes the experience
One year ago NASA was set for another first for the space shuttle program--the
first mission which would return to Earth with fewer astronauts onboard
than it launched with. There has been at least one American astronaut
in space ever since the shuttle Atlantis lifted off on mission STS-76
a year ago tomorrow, establishing a permanent American presence in space.
The anniversary will be marked tomorrow with astronaut Jerry Linenger
on orbit, onboard the Russian space station Mir, ten weeks into his
planned four-month mission. His Mir-23 colleagues, commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, are in the 40th day
of their planned six-month mission. In an interview this week Linenger
said his agenda of life and materials science work is going very well.
"We've got some great experiments I've been conducting. We're way ahead
on the power curve as far as that goes. For example, we did a flame
experiment inside a glovebox, a very controlled situation looking at
ventilation and how it affects flamespread, and I realize that this
is important work I'm doing up here. I am glad to be doing it and I
am very preoccupied with my work.
"I think about pretzels now and then; that's my craving! Shannon had
the M and M's - for some reason, I can't wait to get my hands on a bag
of pretzels. Life in space has been very rewarding and I'm doing just
fine."
Linenger was also asked about the fire onboard the Mir station last
month that occurred when a lithium perchlorate canister ruptured, exposing
the metal holding device to extremely high temperatures. For his firsthand
account, see Fighting Fire Aboard Mir.
The Mir crew is using three of those lithium perchlorate canisters
per day to generate breathing oxygen while awaiting the arrival of parts
to repair the primary oxygen generating system onboard. Linenger says
he feels quite safe using those oxygen candles, and that he has full
confidence that the Russian flight control team will keep the 11-year-old
station operating safely.
Next Wednesday is Jerry Linenger's 74th day in space on this mission;
added to his previous shuttle flight experience of almost 11 full days,
that means that on Wednesday Linenger will move up to fourth on the
list of American astronauts with the most time in space, behind Shannon
Lucid, John Blaha and Norm Thagard.
Training continues in Star City, Russia, outside Moscow, for the astronauts
slated to carry the American presence on the Mir through to the spring
of 1998.
Mike Foale, scheduled to relieve Linenger onboard Mir in mid-May,
is nearing completion of his Russian training and is to return to the
Johnson Space Center in early April to train with his STS-84 crewmates.
Astronauts Wendy Lawrence, and then David Wolf, are in line to follow
Foale, and since their missions will occur during the Russian winter,
they have left Star City for a week of winter survival training in Siberia.
Along with backups Jim Voss and Andy Thomas, they will receive instruction
in how to survive the frigid climate until help arrives should they
be forced to make an emergency.
Current plans still call for the launch of the next Progress resupply
vessel bound for the Mir on Sunday, April 6; if that launch from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakstan occurs on time, the load of food, fuel,
clothing and other supplies for the Mir-23 crew will dock to the Russian
space station on Tuesday, April 8.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of March 28, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
The continuing mission of Americans on the Mir Space Station has entered
a second year, with astronaut Jerry Linenger engaged in on-going investigations
of the effects of prolonged exposure to weightlessness on the human
body. That continuous experiment activity began one year ago this past
Monday, when astronaut Shannon Lucid became a member of the Mir crew;
it extended through her six months onboard, then through the four months
of John Blaha's tour of duty, and for the past 73 days with Linenger.
Today is Linenger's 76th day in space on his scheduled four-month mission;
his Mir-23 crewmates, commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer
Aleksandr Lazutkin, are in the 47th day of their six-month mission,
their 45th day onboard the Russian space station. This week they've
been busy with a variety of housecleaning and maintenance chores, including
the daily activation of lithium perchlorate canisters to generate oxygen
for the three-man crew while Russian flight controllers formulate a
repair strategy for the primary oxygen generation system on the station.
That Elektron system, which employs the process of electrolysis to
extract oxygen from on-board waste water, has been inoperative for the
past three weeks. A Progress re-supply vessel scheduled to arrive at
the Mir on April 8th will carry replacement parts, along with food,
clothing, and other supplies for the crewmembers. Included onboard
will be the spacesuits Tsibliev and Linenger will wear on a spacewalk,
now targeted for late April, when they will retrieve several experiments
to characterize the environment of the Mir's orbit and install several
new ones.
In the meantime, preparations are underway for the expected delivery
of a replacement Elektron unit to the Mir on the shuttle Atlantis when
it visits in May, retrieving Linenger and delivering astronaut Mike
Foale. Current plans call for that system to be installed on Mir during
docked operations on STS-84; the new hardware is scheduled to be loaded
into the double Spacehab module in the shuttle's payload bay on May
6, while Atlantis is on the launch pad being prepared for its targeted
May 15 lift-off.
In a radio interview this week, Linenger was asked if he feels lonely
after more than two months away from home onboard a small space station;
he acknowledged missing his wife and son, but said the Russian space
station offers some unique opportunities.
"[Mir] is a small place, but space is an amazing place to be. Just
today I looked out the windowà and saw Hale-Bopp. It looked like a flashlight
in the sky, and then I looked to the north and saw the Northern Lights
flickering green explosions off the northern horizon of the Earth. Then
I saw the sunrise. Moments like that lift your spirits. Loneliness and
things that you might think would be very tough to bear up here get
kind of mellowed out by things like that. The adventure of being in
space is enough to get you through it and I really have no difficult
problem with that up here."
As work proceeds onboard the Russian space station, there are Americans
at work in Russia preparing to continue the Shuttle-Mir program.
Astronaut Mike Foale is concluding his training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut
Training Center in Star City, Russia, outside Moscow. He is due back
here at the Johnson Space Center April 10 to train with his STS-84 crewmates
prior to their targeted launch to the Mir in mid-May and the start of
his tour of duty on the station.
Foale is to be followed to the Mir in September by astronaut Wendy
Lawrence, and her replacement next January is to be astronaut David
Wolf. Since their missions are scheduled during the harsh Russian winter,
they have been on a winter survival training mission in Siberia for
the past week. Along with backups Jim Voss and Andy Thomas, the group
spent a week in temperatures as cold as 30-below-zero Fahrenheit to
learn how to survive on their own before help arrives in the event of
an emergency return to Earth.
April will be another busy month aboard Mir. Next Wednesday morning
at 7:50 Central Time Linenger will conduct another audio-only interview.
A week from Sunday, April 6, a Progress resupply vehicle carrying food,
fuel, clothing, other supplies and replacement parts for the Mir station
is to be launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakstan in central
Asia. Assuming an on-time launch, that Progress ship is due to dock
to the Mir on Tuesday, April 8.
On Thursday of both that week and the following week, Linenger is scheduled
to conduct television interviews. The following Monday, April 21, will
mark Jerry Linenger's 100th day in space on this four-month mission.
On Tuesday, April 29, Linenger and Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev
are scheduled to conduct a spacewalk, the first time ever that an American
will make a spacewalk from the Mir Space Station, wearing a Russian
spacesuit.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_____________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of April 4, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
onboard the space station Mir, astronaut Jerry Linenger and his Mir-23 colleagues are continuing their preparations for tomorrow's arrival
of a Progress resupply vessel, which launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome
in Kazakstan yesterday morning. That craft, carrying the parts they
will use to make repairs to several of the Mir's cooling loops as well
as a new supply of the canisters they have been using to generate oxygen
and remove carbon dioxide from the station's environment, is scheduled
to dock to the station at 12:28 CDT (17:28 GMT) tomorrow afternoon.
Today is Linenger's 86th day in space on his four-month mission to the
Mir.
This week aboard the Russian Space Station Mir, the crew of Vasily
Tsibliev, Aleksandr Lazutkin and U.S. astronaut Jerry Linenger continued
science operations, and conducted maintenance work on several station
systems. The cosmonauts continue to generate oxygen by burning solid-fuel
oxygen generators known as "candles." The crew has burned three "candles"
each day to maintain acceptable oxygen levels aboard the station. About
130 of the "candles" remain onboard.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_____________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week April 11, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Interview with
Frank Culbertson - Frank Culbertson, NASA Shuttle-Mir Program Director,
talks about the status of MirÆs Elektron system
Success...in the first round of repair activities, reported today by
the crew onboard the Russian space station Mir, whoÆve been focusing
on station maintenance since the arrival this week of needed tools and
supplies on a Progress resupply vehicle.
That resupply ship launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakstan
last Sunday, and was successfully docked to the Mir Monday afternoon
at 12:28, Houston time. Almost immediately, Mir-23 commander Vasili
Ysibliev, flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, and American astronaut
Jerry Linenger began unpacking the ship and putting the new supplies
to use.
Using cutting blades, they removed a leaky heat exchanger from a cooling
loop in the Kvant-1 module; after plugging the exposed ends of the pipes,
they restarted the primary carbon dioxide removal system, the Vosdukh,
and Russian flight controllers report the levels of carbon dioxide on
the station have already dropped substantially. They believe the Vosdukh
can operate safely for 30 days without its cooling system, which is
slated to be repaired next week.
The progress also carried equipment to bypass a clogged filter in the
Elektron system in the Kvant-2 module, one of the systems that uses
the process of electrolysis to extract oxygen from onboard wastewater.
Although that system shut itself down when it was restarted after that
work, it is now believed it has a faulty sensor monitoring fluid levels;
flight controllers think installing the identical part out of the inoperative
Elektron in Kvant-1 will get the Kvant-2 Elektron system operating once
again. Then, the Mir-23 crew will turn its attention to repairing the
leaks in cooling loops in the MirÆs Kvant module and Base Block.
Those leaking cooling loops have not only led to higher-than-normal
temperatures inside the station, but the ethylene glycol that has seeped
from the lines has raised health concerns. In a news conference on Friday,
Linenger talked about the conditions he and his crewmates have been
living with onboard the Mir.
ôThe ethylene glycol caused the concern that I have as crew physician,
inhaling ethylene glycol. We have some respirator filter masks that
we wear when weÆre doing the repairs in Kvant, so that lessens some
of the effect. WeÆre having some congestion, secondary IÆm sure to some
of the fumes. Temperature, of course, not only affects us but also affects
some of the hardware onboard and the ability to remove the moisture
from the air. You need a cooling loop for the condenser to work to gather
the condensate so the humidity is up also, which again is not the best
thing for equipment. It gets very complex very quickly, and we need
to fix our problems.ö
Linenger said he feels fine physically, and that he feels safe onboard
the station despite the difficulties they have had to deal with. This
morning he was asked if his mission to the Mir has turned out the way
he expected it would.
ôNot really, although weÆre out here in the frontier and I guess I
expected the unexpected. WeÆve been getting some of that. As far as
the science return, it is what I expected. We have... More than 100
percent success, and I know it sounds funny to say that but weÆve been
running more metal samples and things like that than we thought weÆd
be able to do. So in spite of some of the difficulties weÆve been having
a very successful mission, and some of the system problems... I can't
say that I expected them, but on the other hand I was trained to work
on those systems and assist the crew where I could.ö
Today is Jerry LinengerÆs 90th day in space on his scheduled four-month
mission to the Mir; for Tsibliev and Lazutkin, this is their 61st day
in space and 59th onboard the orbiting Russian outpost.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
____________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of April 18, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Interview with
Scott Gahring - Scott Gahring, NASA Operations Lead in Kololev,
Russia, reports on the status of MirÆs systems
Last week the crew onboard the Russian Space Station Mir successfully
accomplished repairs to some of the space stationÆs systems after the
delivery of needed tools and supplies on a Progress resupply vehicle.
Using cutting blades, they removed a leaky heat exchanger from a cooling
loop in the Kvant-1 module; after plugging the exposed ends of the pipes,
they restarted the primary carbon dioxide removal system, the Vosdukh,
and Russian flight controllers report the levels of carbon dioxide on
the station have already dropped substantially. They believe the Vosdukh
can operate safely for 30 days without its cooling system, which is
slated to be repaired next week.
The Progress also carried equipment to bypass a clogged filter in the
Elektron system in the Kvant-2 module, one of the systems that uses
the process of electrolysis to extract oxygen from onboard wastewater.
Although that system shut itself down when it was restarted after that
work, itÆs now believed it has a faulty sensor monitoring fluid levels;
flight controllers think installing the identical part out of the inoperative
Elektron in Kvant-1 will get the Kvant-2 Elektron system operating once
again. Then, the Mir-23 crew will turn its attention to repairing the
leaks in cooling loops in the MirÆs Kvant module and Base Block.
In an interview, American astronaut Jerry Linenger said he feels fine
physically, and that he feels safe onboard the station despite the
difficulties theyÆve had to deal with. When asked if his mission to
the Mir has turned out the way he expected it would, he had this to
say:
ôNot really, although weÆre out here in the frontier and I guess I
expected the unexpected. WeÆve been getting some of that. As far as
the science return, it is what I expected. WeÆve had more than 100 percent
success, and I know it sounds funny to say that but weÆve been running
more metal samples and things like that than we thought weÆd be able
to do. So in spite of some of the difficulties weÆve been having a very
successful mission, and some of the system problems, I canÆt say that
I expected them, but on the other hand I was trained to work on those
systems and assist the crew where I could.ö
Friday was Jerry LinengerÆs 90th day in space on his scheduled four-month
mission to the Mir; Tsibliev and Lazutkin have been in space 61 days,
59 onboard the orbiting Russian outpost.
The man slated to succeed Jerry Linenger onboard the Mir Space Station
next month, Mike Foale, has wrapped up the Russian portion of his training
at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia. HeÆll
be back at the Johnson Space Center in Houston next week to begin the
final phase of training with his ST-84 crewmates, leading to their targeted
launch to the Mir on the Atlantis May 15th.
Today through next Tuesday, the Mir-23 crew will concentrate their
daily efforts on completing repairs to the various cooling loops and
an Elektron oxygen generation system onboard their space station. Assuming
the completion of that work as scheduled, next Wednesday the crew will
resume their regular operational and science activities. All three cosmonauts
will be continuing preparations for the scheduled spacewalk by Tsibliev
and Linenger, still targeted for April 28-29.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
____________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of April 25, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Interview with Linda
Godwin - Astronaut Linda Godwin talks about the upcoming space walk
The MirÆs systems have been stabilized, and the cosmonauts onboard
the Russian Space Station Mir are in the final stages of preparation
for a six-hour walk in space next week that will mark a milestone on
the road toward assembly of the International Space Station.
Friday was the 101st day of American astronaut Jerry LinengerÆs four-month
tour of duty onboard the Russian station, and it marks the 400th consecutive
day that there has been in American in space, dating back to the March
1996 launch of the Shuttle Atlantis to deliver astronaut Shannon Lucid
to the Mir. Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin are in their 73rd day onboard the station. On Wednesday, on
his 106th day as a member of the Mir crew, LinengerÆs time onboard
the station will exceed the Mir mission duration of astronaut Norm Thagard,
who spent more than 105 days onboard the station when he was the first
American to go to the Mir in early 1995.
This week all three men have been continuing work to isolate and patch
leaks in various cooling loops onboard the station. Their earlier efforts
restored operation of the stationÆs primary carbon dioxide removal system
and a system for generating oxygen. They have also been preparing for
the spacewalk by Tsibliev and Linenger, scheduled to begin at 11:50
p.m. Houston time next Monday.
Tsibliev and Linenger have been going through a checkout of the spacesuits
they will wear on their excursion. These are new versions of the Russian
Orlan spacesuit, and they arrived at the station onboard the latest
Progress resupply vessel. This will be LinengerÆs first walk in space;
Tsibliev, on the other hand, has conducted five spacewalks during a
previous mission to the Mir in 1993.
When he leaves the MirÆs airlock, Linenger will become the first American
ever to take a spacewalk from the Russian station, wearing a Russian
spacesuit. Once both men have left the Mir's airlock, their first task
will be installation of the Optical Properties Monitor to the stationÆs
docking module. Linenger discussed that task during an interview this
week.
ôGot a space walk coming up next week, put out an Optical Properties
Monitor which'll look at some materials and how they hold up in space
so that we can build better satellites, better space stations, better
space vehicles in the future.ö
In a recent interview, Mike Foale, who will replace Linenger on Mir
in May, described how Tsibliev and Linenger will use a special boom
on the station, called the Strella, to move the OPM and themselves from
one module to another.
ôThey do something rather exciting, I think, and Jerry and I practiced
this in the water tank. They have this thing called the Strella, and
its basically a long telescoping tube just like the antenna on a radio,
and it can telescope in and out, and you can change the telescoping
with your hands, and it allows one person to clamber along it using
the handholds on it to the base. It has like a tank-mounted handled
for elevation and another one for azimuth and VasilyÆll clamber down
there and heÆll then tell Jerry to hold on, attach the big suitcase,
and then Vasili cranks it and moves the whole tube over through the
90░, while JerryÆs just floating 90 feet away from the rest of the Mir,
just on the end of this pole, and it kind of bounces around too, itÆs
pretty whippy, and he will slowly come into the Docking Module side.
Jerry holds on, holds fast, ties off the crane, at which point Vasili
makes his way along it to join Jerry and then he and Jerry will install
the Optical Properties Monitor on the Docking Module.ö
With the OPM installed, Tsibliev and Linenger will move to the Kvant-2
module and remove the Mir sample return experiment, a package similar
to the OPM, which was installed by Mir-21 cosmonauts Yuri Onufriyenko
and Yury Usachev during a spacewalk a year ago. Next theyÆll install
a device called the Benton radiation dosimeter, a passive instrument
gauging radiation levels at the MirÆs orbital inclination of 51.6░,
the same orbit planned for the International Space Station.
Then theyÆll remove the Particle Impact Experiment from Kvant-2, which
has been gathering samples of cosmic dust since its deployment by Onufriyenko
and Usachev last year. Both the PIE and the Mir sample return experiment
will be brought back to Earth onboard Atlantis along with Linenger
next month. The spacewalk is scheduled to conclude at approximately
6 a.m. Tuesday, Houston time.
Throughout their six hours outside the Mir, both men will wear two
kinds of meters to measure their own exposure to radiation, and will
test a new common safety tether planned for use during assembly of the
International Space Station.
Although Tsibliev and Linenger will be outside the station for more
than six hours, theyÆre scheduled to spend half of that time--the half
when the Mir is in darkness--resting and enjoying the view. ThatÆs something
Linenger discussed while finishing his training in Star City last year.
ôDuring dark passes you basically have to stop working and just hang
on and view the stars, whichÆll be a great moment. You will definitely
feel alone out there in the dark, so itÆs going to be an interesting
time out there, out in the deep space by yourself.ö
There will be no live television of the spacewalk, but video clips
of the spacewalk may be made available on this site on Tuesday or Wednesday.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of May 2, 1997
Interview with Dr.
John Charles - Dr. John Charles, NASA Mir Mission Scientist, discusses
Mir scientific experiments
Mission Status Report - Highlights
of the EVA Filed from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
The first-ever joint American-Russian spacewalk was successfully completed
from the space station Mir this week, as astronaut Jerry Linenger and
Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev spent five hours outside their orbiting
home Tuesday morning executing a series of tasks designed to gather
information to aid in the design and assembly of the International Space
Station.
With the space stationÆs environmental systems having stabilized over
the past two weeks, Linenger and his cosmonaut colleagues moved on to
spacewalk preparations late last week, readying the experiment packages
that would be installed on the exterior of the Mir and checking out
their spacesuits--the new Russian Orlan-M spacesuit, designed to provide
the wearer greater mobility and more protection from the harsh effects
of the Sun while working in space. This would be its first on-orbit
test, and the first time an American would make a spacewalk from the
Russian station, wearing a Russian spacesuit.
With flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin assisting from inside the station,
Tsibliev and Linenger opened the airlock on the Kvant-2 module at 12:10
a.m. CDT Tuesday, to begin their assignment. They attached their hardware
to the end of a cargo boom called the Strella; Linenger climbed aboard,
and Tsibliev swung his crewmate and their cargo across to the stationÆs
docking module. After Linenger tied off the end of the Strella, Tsibliev
translated along the boom to join him and the two began their first
task: installation of the Optical Properties Monitor.
The OPM, the large box in this view, contains samples of a variety
of materials intended for use on the International Space Station. The
instrument will take measurements of how those materials are effected
by exposure to the environment of the MirÆs orbit, the same orbit planned
for the new space station; it will be retrieved in a subsequent spacewalk
by another cosmonaut team. With the OPM in place, and with Tsibliev
back at the controls of the Strella, Linenger rode the crane back to
the Kvant-2 module where the spacewalkers would do the remainder of
their work.
Those tasks included installation of an instrument called a Benton
dosimeter, which will measure radiation levels around the Mir, and retrieval
of two experiment packages installed by Mir-21 cosmonauts Yuri Onufriyenko
and Yury Usachev during a spacewalk last year. The Particle Impact Experiment
and the Mir Sample Return Experiment have been collecting data on cosmic
dust and micrometeorite strikes outside the station; both will be analyzed
after theyÆre returned to Earth on the shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-84
next month.
Their work done, Tsibliev and Linenger re-entered the Kvant-2 airlock
at 5:08 a.m. CDT, Tuesday, completing a five-hour walk in space--the
first-ever spacewalk for Linenger, the sixth for Tsibliev on his missions
onboard the Mir. Tsibliev and Lazutkin plan two more spacewalks this
summer-- one to erect an experiment platform on the Spektr Module, and
another to prepare valves on the exterior of the Core Module to accommodate
later work to install a second carbon dioxide removal system on the
station.
The Mir-23 crewmembers then spent a day resting, and stowing their
spacesuits and the articles retrieved from the exterior of the Mir,
and have now resumed more routine activities, including the effort to
isolate a leak in a cooling loop in the Kvant-1 module. The Russian
flight control team reports the MirÆs oxygen generation and carbon dioxide
removal systems are operating normally on this, LinengerÆs 108th day
onboard the station . . . for Tsibliev and Lazutkin, their 80th day
on the orbiting Russian outpost.
Mike Foale and his STS-84 crewmates now have a firm date for launch
in their final preparations for the sixth Shuttle-Mir docking mission.
Wednesday the Space Shuttle Program set may 15th as the official launch
date, with Atlantis set to lift off from launch pad 39-A at the Kennedy
Space Center at 3:08 a.m. central time. Commander Charlie Precourt and
his six-member crew completed the dress rehearsal of their countdown
Tuesday, and he said everyone is ready to go.
Foale reiterated his confidence in the safety of the Mir Space Station,
despite the systems problems it has experienced lately. In fact, he
believes such problems actually make the American and Russian space
programs learn more, more quickly.
In the meantime, astronaut Jim Voss, who is FoaleÆs back-up, has completed
his training regime at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star
City, Russia, and is returning to the U.S. to be available for STS-84
if need be and for future training.
Astronaut Wendy Lawrence, next in line behind Foale for a tour on the
Mir, is also back in the U.S. for training at the Johnson Space Center.
SheÆll return to Star City in late May. Her launch on mission STS-86
is targeted for around September 18th. Late last week NASA managers
decided to fly Atlantis on that seventh Mir docking mission, rather
than Endeavour as had earlier been announced. Atlantis will return to
Palmdale, California for its regularly scheduled orbiter maintenance
and upgrade work after STS-86.
Astronaut David Wolf, slated to follow Lawrence to the Mir early next
year, and his back-up, astronaut Andy Thomas, are also at JSC for training
and are to return to Russia in early June.
Astronaut Bill Shepherd, who will command the first crew to occupy
the International Space Station, recently completed his first detailed
training in Star City, and took part in a design review of the service
module the Russians are building for the new station. Shepherd and his
crewmates, cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev, are also in
Houston for a month of training at JSC.
As Jerry Linenger starts to pack-up for his return to Earth, there
are a few more milestones heÆll make before his four-month mission to
the Mir comes to an end.
On Tuesday May 6th, LinengerÆs 115th day in space, heÆll surpass Norm
Thagard for the third-longest single spaceflight by an American astronaut.
The following Tuesday, May 13th, will be LinengerÆs 119th day as a member
of the Mir crew, making him the foreign guest with the third-longest
stay on the station, behind American astronaut Shannon Lucid and German
astronaut Thomas Reiter.
One week later--on May 20th, the 129th day since his launch on STS-81
last January--LinengerÆs mission duration will exceed the 128-day Mir
mission of astronaut John Blaha, and Linenger will hold the mark for
longest single spaceflight by an American man.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of May 9, 1997
Interview with Frank
Culbertson - Frank Culbertson, NASAÆs Shuttle-Mir Program Manager,
talks about the progress of the program
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
Astronaut Jerry LinengerÆs four-month mission to the space station
Mir has entered the homestretch as preparations proceed for next ThursdayÆs
launch of the space shuttle Atlantis, carrying LinengerÆs replacement
and thousands of pounds of other supplies for the orbiting Russian outpost.
This past week Linenger and his Mir-23 crewmates, commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, were busy packing the
material that will return to Earth with Linenger later this month while
continuing work to find and repair a leak in a cooling loop in the MirÆs
Core Module. Similar efforts to repair a cooling loop in the Kvant-1
module have been deferred until after the receipt of a repair kit that
is being carried on Atlantis. Russian flight controllers report the
stationÆs environmental systems continue operating in near-normal fashion.
Tsibliev and Lazutkin are in the 89th day of their six-month mission
on the station; today is LinengerÆs 118th day in space, and 115th as
a Mir crewmember. In an audio-only interview this week, Linenger said
heÆs eager to get home and see his wife and son, and that last weekÆs
five-hour spacewalk conducted with Tsibliev will be the best memory
heÆll bring back to Earth.
ôItÆs great to do things with our Russian colleagues now, and we actually
tested out a brand new suit. It was the first time that space suit was
ever used in space, and we had a great spacewalk together and good cooperative
spirit going. During the spacewalk, the whole time if felt like I was
falling from the edge of a cliff, and not only falling from a cliff,
but the cliff itself--being the space station-- was falling all the
time, so it was a remarkable feeling, and you had to keep yourself under
control and talk yourself into saying itÆs OK to be falling, and seeing
a spectacular view of the Earth, and the big space station sprawling.
All that was just fantastic. So thatÆs probably the memory IÆm going
to take home the most.ö
Of course, Linenger will also bring home memories of an onboard fire
in February, and of mechanical difficulties that he and his crewmates
have dealt with, but he said the resolution of those problems makes
him comfortable about the safety of the Mir for future residents.
ôThereÆs two sets of difficulties weÆve had. One is the human difficulty
of dealing with those things, and the other one is the space station
itself. WeÆve overcome all the difficulties. The ultimate test is weÆre
still alive and well, weÆre all here exploring the frontier, so IÆm
fairly confident. On the other hand, it takes a lot of work, it takes
daily attention, and it takes a lot of work from smart people on the
ground looking over our shoulders and giving some guidance along the
way. But we were able to overcome about as much difficulty as you can
imagine, so IÆm fairly confident.ö
The man slated to relieve Linenger onboard the Mir next week, astronaut
Mike Foale, has a similar outlook to LinengerÆs about the mechanical
state of the Russian space station. During last weekÆs STS-84 prelaunch
crew news conference, Foale said the risks of a Mir mission are not
unusual, given that machines do break down with age.
ôYou have to make sure you have food and air and power and sufficient
cooling or heating to maintain all the basic conditions of life onboard
the space station, and those are provided by mechanical systems. And
just like an old car that's been running for 13 years--and the Mir has
been running almost that long--you're going to have some systems start
to fail and you have to do continuous maintenance to maintain these
systems to provide those essential ingredients that you need to live
and work. And I think we're going to see episodes, not only on Mir,
but one day on the International Space Station, of intense repair work
and this is part of the business. All ships have it, aircraft have it
regularly, except you don't see it in flight. I just think it's part
of the business of going into space and it's what we're learning the
most right now out of all of this. The science I'm going to do is valuable,
and I'm glad to do it, and it's interesting, but actually it's the unexpected
maintenance aspects that will probably be the most valuable lessons
that we pull from all this.ö
Foale said he has no reservations about his safety onboard the Mir,
and that he feels his launch on the space shuttle will be the most dangerous
part of his mission. In an earlier interview, he said he believes even
the February fire on the station should be taken as a valuable learning
experience.
ôI think the Soyuz is really the biggest insurance ticket they have,
and itÆs the safest and the most proven they have, and as such, with
the presence of the Soyuz descent capsule there the whole time, I will
never feel particularly vulnerable. The fire is the worst case that
you can imagine, I think. But, again, weÆve actually learned something
rather interesting in the recent experience on the Mir. WeÆve learned
how to put out a fire or, at least, how it propagates and what the toxic
chemicals are that remain in the atmosphere. And from all data to date,
it looks like it was survivable and you could recover from it, which
is a very important data point.ö
onboard the Mir, astronaut Jerry Linenger and his cosmonaut colleagues
are preparing their station and its cargo for next weekÆs arrival of
the space shuttle, and five days of docked operations. During the five
days of docked operations Linenger will end his tour of duty on the
Mir, Mike Foale will begin his four-and- a-half months as a Mir crewmember,
and the shuttle crew will move more than three tons of supplies between
the orbiter and the station.
On Tuesday May 20th, the 129th day since his launch last January, LinengerÆs
mission duration will exceed that of John BlahaÆs flight to the Mir
and put Linenger in second place--behind Shannon Lucid--for the longest
single spaceflight by an American astronaut.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of May 16, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
The Mir-23 crew--commander Vasily Tsibliev, flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, and astronaut Jerry Linenger--spent this day finishing their
preparations for tonightÆs docking. Today is LinengerÆs 122nd day as
a member of the Mir crew, and the 96th day in space for Tsibliev and
Lazutkin, who are to remain on orbit until August.
The sixth Shuttle-Mir docking is scheduled to occur at 9:34 p.m. central
time. A few hours later, Mike Foale will become the fifth American to
take up residence on the Mir and Jerry Linenger will return to his role
as a shuttle crewmember.
Pilot Eileen Collins spent part of her day filling a contingency water
container. More than 1000 pounds of water, generated onboard Atlantis
as a by-product of power production, will be transferred to the Mir
during the five days of docked operations.
Along with water, three tons of other supplies will be exchanged between
the two spacecraft. The largest single item is a replacement oxygen
generation system for the Mir. This new Elektron unit will be installed
in the Kvant-1 module, and the failed unit now in Kvant-1 will be returned
to Earth.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of May 23, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
On the Mir Space Station, flight engineer Mike Foale and his cosmonaut
crewmates are getting him settled in onboard the station, and unpacking
the repair kits delivered by Atlantis, which they will use to finish
repairs to a cooling loop in the MirÆs Kvant-1 module; those repairs
could take place as early as next week. Today is FoaleÆs ninth day in
space, and his seventh as a member of the Mir-23 crew.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of May 30, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Astronaut Mike Foale is two weeks into his four-month mission to the
Russian space station Mir, settling in on his new home on orbit while
setting up the hardware heÆll use to conduct the scientific investigations
planned for his long- duration space flight. Today is FoaleÆs fourteenth
day as a crewmember onboard the Russian station; Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin are in the 110th day
of their six-month mission.
This week FoaleÆs been setting up special containment areas in which
64 black-bodied beetles will be exposed to special lighting conditions
in a study of the effects of those conditions on the insectsÆ circadian
rhythms. HeÆs also been preparing the greenhouse facility, which will
house a biology experiment on plant growth in microgravity.
FoaleÆs already had an opportunity to work with his cosmonaut colleagues
on station maintenance--this week the Mir crew conducted repairs to
a cooling loop in the stationÆs Kvant-1 module, continuing a job that
began back in March. Once that loop is confirmed to be operating properly,
perhaps as early as Tuesday, the cosmonauts will move on to installing
the new Elektron oxygen generation system brought to the Mir with Foale
on the shuttle Atlantis. Once back in operation, this VGK loop will
also provide cooling for the stationÆs carbon dioxide removal system,
which has been operating normally without cooling since mid-April.
The shuttle mission that delivered Foale to the Mir two weeks ago landed
at the Kennedy Space Center last Saturday morning, bringing astronaut
Jerry Linenger home to Earth after 132 days in space, the second-longest
single spaceflight by any American astronaut. Linenger furthered his
research into the effects of long exposure to microgravity on the human
body by walking off the shuttle under his own power. Linenger said he
felt better than he expected he would, crediting the exercise program
he maintained while onboard the Mir. Linenger will spend the next several
weeks in debriefings while working closely with his flight surgeons
to assist his bodyÆs readjustment to gravity.
FoaleÆs tour of duty on the Mir is scheduled to continue into September,
when STS-86 brings astronaut Wendy Lawrence to the Mir to take over
for Foale in the next increment in the first phase of the International
Space Station program. After a training session in Houston, Lawrence
has returned to the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City,
Russia, outside Moscow, to resume her preparations. Astronaut David
Wolf, who will replace Lawrence on the Mir early next year, and his
back-up, astronaut Andy Thomas, are completing a Houston training session
and will be back in Star City next week.
The following activity is scheduled for the coming week onboard the
Space Station Mir.
Over the weekend Mir commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineers
Aleksandr Lazutkin and Mike Foale expect to complete repairs to the
VGK cooling loop in the Kvant-1 module; once Russian ground controllers
are satisfied the loop is holding pressure, the Mir crewmembers will
begin installation of the new Elektron oxygen generation system in the
Kvant-1 module. That may begin as early as Tuesday.
This week Foale will also be busy preparing the microgravity glovebox
facility in the Priroda Module for a series of fluid physics and materials
science experiments, setting up the containment area for the black-bodied
beetles, and beginning the first round of plant growth operations in
the greenhouse facility.
Throughout the week, all three crewmembers will spend time with their
on- going series of Earth observations to monitor weather and geologic
phenomena and observable changes to the surface of the planet.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of June 6, 1997
Interview with
Mike Foale - Mike Foale describes his work and life onboard Mir
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir
Mission Control in Moscow
The scientific research mission of astronaut Mike FoaleÆs tour of duty
on the Space Station Mir is well underway, as he completes his third
week of a four-month mission to the Russian space station investigating
the effects of prolonged exposure to weightlessness.
Mir23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin,
who are 117 days into their six-month mission on the Mir, have been
occupied lately searching for and repairing leaks in some of the stationÆs
cooling loops. Foale reported their work has been successful, and led
to improved conditions on the station for the long run.
Although the cosmonauts had earlier repaired a leak to the cooling
loop in the Kvant-1 module there were suspicions that another existed,
and this week Tsibliev and Lazutkin isolated a leak in the portion of
the loop that flows along the moduleÆs hull to prevent condensation.
After installing hardware to bypass that section of the loop and repressurizing
it, the crew found a small amount of ethylene glycol coolant near a
by-passed section of the loop near the Vozdukh, the stationÆs primary
carbon dioxide removal system, which has been operating normally.
Foale has repeatedly tested the air in several of the stationÆs modules
and found the amount of ethylene glycol present is small enough that
it poses no threat to the crewÆs health. On Friday he assisted Tsibliev
in confirming the source of this coolant leak and they have replaced
the part of the loop that was leaking. This VGK loop is now holding
pressure, and the crewmembers are preparing to place cooling fluid back
into the loop.
Once these repairs are complete, the Mir-23 crew will move on to the
installation of the new Elektron oxygen generation system, which was
delivered on the shuttle Atlantis along with Foale last month. The new
Elektron will serve as a back-up to the fully operational unit in the
Kvant-2 module.
During the week the Mir crewmembers have also done maintenance work
on the heating loop in the stationÆs core module, and worked to remove
a clog in the Base BlockÆs condensate recovery system.
This week Tsibliev, Lazutkin, and Foale will continue the ongoing work
of seeing to the health of the various systems of their orbiting home.
Foale will also monitor the growth of the seedlings in the greenhouse
apparatus, and check on the Mir structural dynamics experiment, which
is taking measurements throughout the station of the forces imparted
to it by the activity of the crew onboard.
Monday through Wednesday of next week they will begin stowing used
equipment in the Progress resupply vessel now docked to the station.
On Friday, June 20, the Mir cosmonauts will conduct a test of a manually
controlled undocking of the Progress vessel, and three days later they
will perform a manually controlled redocking of the Progress to the
station.
While Foale proceeds with his work on orbit, the astronauts who will
continue the American mission to the Mir are all back at the Gagarin
Cosmonaut Training Center, in Star City. Astronaut Wendy Lawrence has
begun the final phase of her training in Russia before returning to
the Johnson Space Center this summer to work with her STS-86 crewmates,
who have a targeted launch on the shuttle Atlantis this September to
deliver Lawrence and return Foale to Earth.
Astronaut David Wolf, and his back-up astronaut Andy Thomas, have resumed
their training in Star City. Wolf is scheduled to succeed Lawrence onboard the Mir when he launches on mission STS-89, onboard the shuttle
Endeavour, in January of next year, for the final increment of the Shuttle-Mir
program.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of June 13, 1997
Interview with Mike
Foale - Mike Foale talks about his first month on Mir
Interview with
Jerry Linenger - Jerry LinengerÆs first interview since returning
from Mir
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Astronaut Mike Foale is wrapping up the first month of his planned
four-month tour of duty on the Russian Space Station Mir, in a week
highlighted by the completion of repairs to a key cooling loop in the
space stationÆs Kvant-1 module, while moving ahead with his agenda of
on-orbit science. In an interview yesterday Foale said heÆs finding
life onboard the Mir very comfortable due to the absence of gravity.
ô. . . the view is fantastic and the work is interesting, so IÆm having
a good time. Mir is comfortable, mostly because youÆre in zero gravity
and when you sleep, in particular, thatÆs when I really appreciate the
comfort. You just float in a slightly fetal-like position but in a sleeping
bag that surrounds you. As a result of that, you sleep very, very well
at night, and IÆve been sleeping better than I have done for years.
As far as living conditions--eating and drinking--we have all the facilities
and amenities here and itÆs pleasant. We even have some treats that
were sent up on the Progress supply ships like chocolates and things,
so itÆs a pretty good life. ItÆs better than most camping trips if you
would want to compare it with something.ö
Foale discussed his scientific research on orbit to date, particularly
the fundamental biology experiment in which heÆs attempting to grow
three generations of mustard plants from one set of seeds. The ability
to grow plants on orbit, as a source of food and oxygen, could be vital
for sustaining life on future space stations and during interplanetary
spaceflights.
ôWe expect these plants to grow and produce flowers in the next week.
TheyÆve already been growing about two weeks. The Latin name of the
plant is brassica and it will go through its full cycle where I actually
fix the plants and preserve them for return to the Earth over a period
of 30 days. Since IÆm doing to be here for roughly four and half / five
months, I will get a chance to do this three times. We hope that we
will produce seeds after I have pollinated the flowers of these plants.
And then replant those.ö
ôOverall IÆve been having a very relaxed and easy time. My ground team
in Moscow in the Control Center. We have an American team thatÆs been
working hard replanning my activies, keeping me pretty refreshed and
pleasant. WeÆve been working together twice a day discussing the problems
and the experiments weÆre going to do next. EverythingÆs going rather
well. ItÆs a lot easier than I expected.ö
Foale is completing one month onboard the Mir station today; his Mir-23 crewmates, commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, are in the 124th day of their six-month mission. Foale says
the three of them have adapted to life on orbit together in smooth fashion.
As mentioned earlier, this past week Tsibliev, Lazutkin, and Foale
completed repairs to a leaky cooling loop in the MirÆs Kvant-1 module.
Last Friday a crack was located in the section of that loop that runs
along the inner hull of the module to prevent condensation. That section
was removed and replaced with a hose. The loop was then reactivated
with all other bypasses removed and has been operating normally.
With that repair complete, the new Elektron oxygen generation unit
brought to the Mir on AtlantisÆ docking mission last month was set up
and attached to this cooling loop. Its installation is scheduled to
be completed next week with electrical connections and a hook-up to
a hydrogen vent line. This new unit will serve as a back-up to the Elektron
now operating without problem in the MirÆs Kvant-2 module.
During the course of repairing that cooling loop, the Mir crewmembers
discovered small amounts of the ethylene glycol coolant on some surfaces
in the Kvant-1 module. Monitoring of the air inside the Mir showed it
is safe to breathe. But playing it safe, Russian mission managers have
instructed the crewmembers to stop drinking condensate water until its
purity can be assessed. Those tests will be run on samples to be brought
back to Earth with Tsibliev and Lazutkin in August. Additional supplies
of drinking water for the Mir-23 crew are being loaded on a Progress
resupply vessel, which is now targeted for a June 29th launch from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakstan.
This morning, for the first time since he concluded the second-longest
spaceflight by any American astronaut last month, Jerry Linenger met
with reporters to discuss his flight to the Mir. He spent 132 days in
space on that mission, but he noted that being part of the Shuttle-Mir
program has been a commitment of more than two years, and that heÆs
not done yet. Linenger said the science work he did while onboard the
space station is what he misses most about his time there, and that
he feels a sense of accomplishment for the way he and his five colleagues
responded to emergencies, particularly the onboard fire in February.
In the three weeks since Linenger returned to Earth onboard Atlantis
May 24th, heÆs been working with his flight surgeons on re-adapting
to life with gravity, an adjustment he says heÆs making quite well.
ôIt was much less difficult than I anticipated and the one thing I
can tell you during my rehab, for example, I tried to do low-impact
things , so I was and am swimming a lot. The water felt like jello the
first three days, it felt like mercury the next three days, and now,
after about two weeks, itÆs started feeling like water again. There
is a certain resistance that the Earth offers and that gravity offers.
Driving is something that is not a big problem because I sold my truck
before I left two years ago. The flight surgeons are cautious of me
driving but it hasnÆt been a problem yet, but I feel capable of driving.
But there will be some objective tests about wheter IÆm properly oriented.
I think if you saw me walking down the street youÆd say, ôThere goes
Jerry,ö and you would never know that IÆd been in space for four or
five months.
ôI am very much reacclimated. I feel very normal. I can pick up my
son, I can toss him around the pool. I am very normal. On the other
hand, when you look at the medical tests, I do have the bone loss, I
do have some muscle strength deficits, and being a sports medicine physician,
I realize that you need to be very cautious until you get your strength
back up, full-speed ahead objectively before you do things like running.
IÆm sticking very exactly to the program that the trainer has outlined
for me and IÆm doing mostly water work right now until my muscles get
back to 100% objectively.ö
On orbit, Linenger said the one food item he really missed was pretzels.
Since his return, heÆs received many gifts of pretzels from friends
and family, and now, Linenger says heÆs sick of pretzels. As for his
future, linenger says heÆs considering his options, which include possibly
retiring from the US Navy and from the space program.
Linenger's was the fourth mission of an American to the Mir Space Station.
The astronauts who will extend the permanent American presence in space
beyond Mike Foale's tour of duty are all in training at sites in Russia
this week.
Astronauts Wendy Lawrence, scheduled to follow Foale to the Mir this
September, and David Wolf, who will relieve Lawrence onboard the station
next January, spent this past week in water survival training activities
on the Black Sea.
Astronaut Andy Thomas, training as WolfÆs back up, spent this week
at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia, continuing
his Russian language studies and having practical instruction sessions
on the systems of the Mir Space Station.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of June 20, 1997
Interview with
John Charles - John Charles, the mission scientist for Foale's portion
of the Shuttle-Mir program, talks about the science that Mike Foale
is conducting
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
The environmental systems onboard the Russian Space Station Mir have
been operating without trouble this week, as American astronaut Mike
Foale forges ahead with his four-month agenda of science experiments
to learn more about the adaptation of people and plants to long periods
in microgravity.
Throughout the five weeks of Foale's tour of duty on the Mir so far,
and prior to that, during astronaut Jerry Linenger's time on the station,
Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin
have been making repairs to various station environmental systems. Foale
said that maintenance work has led to more normal conditions onboard
the station.
ôI would say that I've only seen the very end of all that. Sasha Lazutkin
and Vasily Tsibliev, my commander, they have worked pretty hard even
while I've been here fixing systems and they succeeded in doing that,
especially the cooling system. Now what we're finding is the station
is getting back together again and in order. So I've actually not seen
any real problems. We had a small spill of ethylene glycol, which is
like radiator fluid in a car, but that's been mopped up and we're monitoring
that on a regular basis and it's not harmful.ö
The cooling loop in the Mir's Kvant-1 module has been operating normally
since its return to service last week, and the new back-up oxygen generation
system delivered to the station along with Foale last month may be test-
activated next week. The Mir crew has also been working on repairs to
the condensate recovery system, which removes moisture from the air
in the station. James Medford, a Mir systems specialist on NASA's mission
operations support team in the Russian control center in Korolev, gave
this report of the latest status of that system.
ôWhat they're looking at is a unit that they call the condensate separation
and feeding unit, which takes the moisture directly from the air conditioner.
That moisture also has some air mixed in with it, so it first has to
pass through a separator that takes the air out of the liquid and dumps
it back into the environment in the cabin, and the remaining liquid
is fed on to the water purification columns unit where the contaminants
are removed from the water. It's that condensate separation and feeding
unit that they think they're having the problem in. They think there's
some kind of a blockage, potentially that the pumps just can't overcome.
I'm sure they have an identical unit here on the ground that they can
test and experiment with to see if they can replicate what they're seeing
through their telemetry. I have a feeling they're just taking apart
whatever they have here on the ground and going through all the possible
places where there could be a blockage and then from there they can
tell the crew what to do.ö
In terms of the station's environmental systems, Medford called this
past week the quietest one in months. Today is the 35th day of Mike
Foale's planned four-month stay onboard the Mir Space Station. During
his previous three space shuttle missions Foale logged a total of 26
days in space, and he says right now he feels better on orbit than he
ever did onboard the shuttle.
ôI would say this time, compared to being on shuttle, I feel very much
more healthy. I've noticed that my vision, for example, is really clear.
It may be because I've managed to avoid all that paperwork I used to
have to do on the ground in Houston. With the three or four hours of
exercise that we do each day--we work out on an ergometer and a treadmill--and
along with the regular diet and all the rest, I feel very healthy. And
of course we don't get colds here. No one comes by to infect us. ö
During his tour of duty on the Mir, Foale is carrying out an agenda
of scientific investigation aimed at learning how people and plants
respond to long periods in the absence of gravity. In one of those experiments
he's been growing a variety of mustard plant in a greenhouse enclosure.
He explained how he pollinated the plants so they will produce a new
generation of seeds.
ôWe have a very interesting experiment, growing rapeseed for the first
time in space, and we're trying to produce seeds from these plants that
we've grown in the greenhouse. The application of that is that in the
future we could grow plants that produced oxygen and food for us on
spacecraft and on planets. Well, the first thing to do is to be able
to make seeds in space and today I have plants that have produced flowers,
and my job today is to take bee sticks, pieces of bees on sticks, and
pollinate the flowers. So I go around each flower doing a sort of buzz,
buzz, buzz thing, going around each flower and transferring the pollen
from flower to flower. And that's my job today. That's the farm report.ö
The Americans scheduled to follow Mike Foale to the Russian space station
have been in training at a couple of locations in Russia during this
past week.
Astronauts Wendy Lawrence and David Wolf, slated for the sixth and
seventh Shuttle-Mir missions, spent this week at the Gagarin Cosmonaut
Training Center in Star City, Russia, studying a variety of payloads,
the Mir's life support system, and continuing their physical training.
Astronaut Andy Thomas, who is training as Wolf's back-up for the final
mission of the joint Shuttle-Mir program in water survival training
manuevers at the Black Sea.
Next Tuesday, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev will send commands for
the undocking of the Progress re-supply craft currently attached to
the Mir station. That Progress will fly near the Mir for a day, then
will use the automated docking system to redock to the Mir the following
day for a test of that systems' capability.
Next Friday, a new Progress resupply craft bound for the Mir Space Station is scheduled to be launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakstan, in central Asia. Assuming an on-time launch, the progress
vessel currently docked to the station will be undocked for the final
time next Saturday, June 28th and the new ship, carrying a cargo of
food, fuel, clothing, and other supplies, will dock to the Mir Space Station next Sunday, June 29th.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of June 27, 1997
Interview with Frank
Culbertson - Frank Culbertson, NASA Shuttle-Mir Program Manager,
discusses the condition of the crew and the space station
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
U.S. astronaut Mike Foale and his cosmonaut colleagues on the Russian
space station Mir are still assessing the state of their orbiting home
following Wednesday morning's collision of an unmanned progress resupply
craft with the station's Spektr module during a test of a remote manually
guided docking system. The impact left one of Spektr's four solar arrays
and a radiator crumpled, and created a hole in the module's hull that
forced the crew to close Spektr's hatch and seal it off from the rest
of the station.
Closing that hatch meant disconnecting the lines that deliver power
to the station from Spektr's three undamaged solar arrays. With half
of the Mir's electrical generating capability unavailable, many station
systems have been powered down to conserve electricity while the station
is turned to a better attitude to generate power from the remaining
solar arrays on other modules.
In early march, while astronaut Jerry Linenger was onboard Mir, a
test of this same remote-controlled docking system experienced a similar
kind of failure, although a collision was averted. During a news earlier
this week, Linenger described that event and how the crew onboard Mir
was able to see the progress vessel as it moved toward the station.
ôIt was a similar situation in that we were redocking an already used
Progress and testing the same system. My understanding is that it was
a different failure mode. I don't know what the failure mode is and
I'm not sure anyone knows what the failure mode was at this point in
the most recent event. During ours it was a matter of a television monitor
not coming up at the command post where Vasily was standing at that
time and therefore we were unable to see the camera view from the Progress
and therefore unable to see the docking port and therefore unable to
do a successful docking. We reacted to that by firing jet impulses to
have the Progress veer away from us. It was a similar situation. We
were all looking out the windows trying to spot the Progress coming
and when we saw it, it was coming in quickly and at us when Vasily responded
by firing jet impulses. That control worked perfectly that time. We
were able control the vehicle and fire the thrusters and avoid the collision.ö
Since his return from the Mir Space Station last month Linenger has
been working with his flight surgeons on his readaptation to gravity,
and has conducted numerous debriefings about his stint on Mir. Despite
the recent trouble onboard the station, the astronauts in line to follow
Mike Foale to the Mir have been preparing for their missions at the
Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, in Star City, Russia.
Astronaut Wendy Lawrence had training sessions in the Soyuz simulator
and a Mir practical session, along with payload training and physical
training. Lawrence is scheduled to arrive on Mir in September.
Astronaut David Wolf joined Lawrence for physical training and attended
sessions on the Mir's life support systems. Wolf's back-up, astronaut
Andy Thomas, continued his physical training and Russian language instruction
along with sessions on the life support systems of the Soyuz capsule,
which cosmonauts use to return to Earth.
Meanwhile, commander Terry Wilcutt and his STS-89 crewmates spent this
week in star city, touring the training center and joining Lawrence
and Wolf for a variety of lessons on Mir systems. STS-89 is targeted
for a launch to the Mir this coming January, bringing Wolf to the Russian
station and returning Lawrence to Earth.
NASA's director of operations in Star City, astronaut Mike Lopez-Alegria,
had two spacewalk training sessions in a Russian spacesuit this week,
in anticipation of his assignment on mission STS-92 in January 1999
on an International Space Station assembly flight. He's also been conducting
a handover to his replacement, veteran astronaut Brent Jett, who arrived
in Star City this week to assume his duties as director of operations
on July 1st.
Veteran cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev has been looking at the current situation
onboard the Mir. Krikalev is leading the development of possible spacewalking
procedures which may be used to try to recover the Spektr module or
the use of its power-generating solar arrays.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of July 4, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
onboard the Space Station Mir, American astronaut Mike Foale and his
Russian cosmonaut colleagues have spent this day making preparations
for the arrival of a Progress re-supply ship. That unmanned cargo craft,
operating through automatically controlled systems, is scheduled to
dock to the Russian station at 12:58 a.m. CDT on Monday morning.
Along with food, fuel and clothing, this cargo ship is carrying special
supplies for an internal spacewalk planned for later this month to recover
the use of the solar arrays on the station's Spektr module. Lines bringing
power from those arrays into the station's Base Block were disconnected
last week as the module was sealed following a collision with another
unmanned cargo ship, which caused Spektr to depressurize. The current
repair plan calls for Foale to man the Soyuz capsule docked to the station,
and for commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin
to don their spacesuits and depressurize the station's transfer node,
then open the hatch into Spektr and install a modified hatch through
which the power lines can be routed while keeping the module sealed.
If successful, the orbiting outpost would recover valuable power for
the rest of Mir's operations and science activities.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of July 11, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
Dan Goldin Talks
to Mike Foale - On Tuesday, July 8, Dan Goldin, NASA Administrator,
had a conversation with Mike Foale
Press Briefing -
On July 7, Frank Culbertson gave a status update and answered questions
Ham Radio Link
with Columbia - On July 8 the crew of Columbia talked to Mike Foale
by ham radio
Work continues onboard the Russian Space Station Mir to prepare for
a planned internal spacewalk later this month. That activity is intended
to recover the use of solar arrays mounted to the exterior of the station's
Spektr module, power that was lost when the lines were disconnected
and the module sealed two weeks ago after an unmanned cargo ship collided
with the module and caused it to depressurize.
Mir-23 commander Vasily Ttsibliev, flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin,
and American astronaut Mike Foale have been preparing special hardware,
delivered this week on a new Progress resupply ship, which the Russians
will use to modify the Spektr's hatch during the spacewalk so power
can be routed through the closed hatch to batteries in the station's
core module. A dry-run practice session for that internal spacewalk
is tentatively scheduled for next Tuesday, July 14th.
Also on that cargo craft were supplies for repair of the station's
Antares communications system. Today the crew installed two transmitters
that should enable Mir to make use of the Altair satellite once again
to expand its range of communication with Russian ground controllers.
During preparation for that installation yesterday, the temperature
of the cooling loop, which services the Antares, was raised to prevent
condensation on the apparatus; that adjustment also raised the temperature
in the station's Elektron system, the primary oxygen generation system,
which is serviced by the same cooling loop. The Elektron was turned
off yesterday to prevent its overheating; today it was restarted and
is operating normally and at the proper temperature.
Today is the 150th day onboard Mir for the Russian cosmonauts, the
56th for Foale.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of July 18, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Press Briefing
- On July 18, Frank Culbertson gave a status update and answered questions
Press Briefing
- On July 17, Frank Culbertson gave a status update and answered questions
Conditions onboard the Russian Space Station Mir continue to stabilize
this morning, and the three crewmembers have been told to rest up from
the work they've done to restore the station's attitude and power supplies
in the wake of this week's in-flight incident.
Wednesday afternoon, the cosmonauts were working on possible cable
configurations that will be required to seal off the transfer node prior
to an attempt to recover access to the power from solar arrays on the
station's Spektr module. During that work a cable conveying data to
the station's navigation computer was inadvertently disconnected. Although
it was quickly reconnected, the computer shut down and the station went
into free drift, a condition in which its jet thrusters are disabled
from firing.
With the Mir's solar arrays not collecting power at acceptable levels
because the station was not properly oriented to the Sun, the station's
batteries were drained over the next few orbits. Virtually all station
systems were shut down to conserve power, and the cosmonauts used the
jets on the Soyuz capsule attached to the Mir to re-orient the station
to the Sun.
John Curry, a NASA operations lead in the Russian mission control center
in Korolev, outside Moscow gave this report this morning.
ôEverything is doing much better than it was yesterday. The crew was
able to reestablish good attitude control with the jets early this morning,
so then they were able to reorient the space station into an attitude
that would provide good solar charging on the batteries, and since they've
been doing that, we've slowly been able to turn on various pieces of
equipment and things are looking much better. All the environmental
parameters are within the normal ranges. In fact, the oxygen supply
is high enough that they didn't have to turn on the Elektron system
this morning, which is the thing that produces oxygen on the Mir, and
they won't need to do that until tomorrow. The carbon dioxide removal
system, the Vozdukh system, was turned on at about 4:30 a.m. CDT, and
the thermal control system has been reactivated.
ôOn the next pass over the Russian ground station, they're going to
check out the gyrodynes and see if they can spin them up, and about
six hours from then, about 4:00 p.m. CDT, they will establish full attitude
control. If all proceeds as planned with that, they should have full
charge on everything by noon tomorrow.
ôThe crew is doing pretty well, all things considered. Except for feeling
a little bit snake bitten in terms of having new problems to work every
day, they've been doing pretty well. Today has been dedicated completely
to making sure that the station is in a good attitude to charge the
solar batteries, and as the current levels on the batteries come up
they've been repowering equipment. They're all in good health, and on
the last pass they sounded real well and I don't foresee any problems.ö
The current power-up of the station's batteries is very similar to
what the Mir-23 crew went through more than three weeks ago after the
collision of an unmanned Progress cargo craft with the station's Spektr
module. That impact caused Spektr to lose pressure, and the crewmembers
had to disconnect the cables delivering power from Spektr's solar arrays
in order to seal that module from the rest of the station.
The work they were engaged in this week, when the latest incident occurred,
was in preparation to recover access to that power source. On that front,
NASA has given approval for Foale to begin on-orbit training to be a
suited participant for an internal spacewalk. Russian mission managers
requested Foale's assistance after their flight surgeons detected an
irregular heartbeat in Tsibliev and decided that, although he is healthy,
they did not want him to perform the spacewalk.
NASA's Shuttle-Mir program manager Frank Culbertson has given the "go"
for Foale to begin training for the spacewalk along with Lazutkin; a
decision on whether or not Foale will, in fact, make this spacewalk
will not be made until after a joint American-Russian readiness review,
which will be conducted prior to the planned spacewalk. The spacewalk
has not yet been rescheduled, and Russian space officials are reviewing
their options in the wake of the latest power problem on the Mir.
In a briefing this morning, Culbertson explained that delaying the
spacewalk until the arrival of a new crew of cosmonauts, who are scheduled
to launch on August 5th, is a possibility, and that there are several
reasons to consider it.
Mir-24 commander Anatoly Solovyev and flight engineer Pavel Vinogradov
have been training in the Russian Hydrolab facility, a giant water tank
at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, outside Moscow,
practicing internal spacewalks as well as trips outside the station
to examine the damage caused by the June 25th Progress collision.
Before the readiness review is conducted, Foale and Lazutkin will rehearse
the repair procedures in a shirtsleeve environment, and again while
wearing pressurized spacesuits. Despite the difficulties this crew of
space travelers has encountered, Culbertson says the personal and professional
relationships of the three men onboard Mir continues to be strong and
supportive, and that Foale himself is enthused about his participation
in this mission.
In the meantime, training continues for the Americans slated for the
remaining two tours of duty in the Shuttle-Mir program. Astronaut Wendy
Lawrence is in the final stages of her training in Star City. She's
scheduled for a launch on the shuttle Atlantis in September to relieve
Foale and begin her own four-month mission. She would be replaced onboard Mir in January by astronaut David Wolf; his four-month mission,
which should conclude next May, would be the final increment in the
program.
The Mir-23 crewmembers have been instructed by the Russian flight control
teams to rest throughout this coming weekend; mission managers will
re- assess the status of Mir systems next week and could decide on Monday
on a schedule for the resumption of onboard activities.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of July 25, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed from Mir Mission
Control in Moscow
Interview with
Mark Severance - Mark Severance, NASA Operations Lead at Mission
Control Center in Korolev talks about conditions aboard Mir and crew
activities in the upcoming days and weeks
American astronaut Mike Foale and his cosmonaut colleagues have entered
the final phase of their mission together onboard the Space Station
Mir, as the two Russians have begun packing for their scheduled return
to Earth in three weeks.
This week the Russian State Commission of Chief Designers announced
that the current crew would not conduct the internal spacewalk, and
assigned it to the next crew of cosmonauts, so that Tsibliev and Lazutkin
can turn their full attention to maintaining station systems and getting
ready for the upcoming handover to their successors.
While seeing to station maintenance, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev
and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, now in the 166th day of their
mission, are busy with preparations for the arrival of their replacements.
A Soyuz capsule carrying Mir-24 commander Anatoly Solovyev and flight
engineer Pavel Vinogradov is scheduled to launch from the Baikonur cosmodrome
in Kazakstan in central Asia on August 5, and should dock to the Mir
on August 7th.
Given the reduced power capability onboard Mir due to the loss of
access to the solar arrays mounted to the Spektr module, the Russian
managers also decided not to launch French researcher Leopold Eyharts
for his planned three- week science mission during the Mir-23 handover
to Mir-24. That means the handover can be accomplished in just one week,
putting Tsibliev and Lazutkin on target to return to Earth August 14
to wrap up 185 days in space.
Shortly after Tsibliev and Lazutkin return home, the Mir-24 crew will
begin preparations for the internal spacewalk, a task Solovyev and Vinogradov
have been practicing at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star
City, Russia. That spacewalk, with Foale participating from inside the
Soyuz capsule docked to the station's transfer node, is now scheduled
for no earlier than August 20. They're also planning a spacewalk outside
the station, to examine the Spektr module in hope of locating the breach
in its hull, in early September.
Here is the current, and preliminary, schedule of the upcoming activities
onboard the Mir Space Station.
On the morning of August 5, at 10:35 Houston time, Mir-24 commander
Anatoly Solovyev and flight engineer Pavel Vinogradov are to be launched
from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in a Soyuz capsule for the two-day ride
to Mir. Assuming that launch does take place, the next day Russian ground
controllers will command the Progress resupply ship currently attached
to the Mir's Kvant-1 module to undock and move into an independent orbit
near the Russian station.
Early the next afternoon, at 12:23 Houston time, the Soyuz capsule
carrying Solovyev and Vinogradov will dock to the Mir's Kvant-1 docking
port. During the ensuing week the five residents of the Mir will conduct
a handover of station operational responsibility, and then on Thursday,
August 14, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin will board the Soyuz at the Mir's transfer node, undock, and
head for a soft landing in central Asia.
The following day, August 15, the remaining Soyuz capsule will be flown
from the Kvant-1 docking port to the opposite end of the station, where
it will be required during the internal spacewalk. Solovyev, Vinogradov,
and Foale will be aboard the Soyuz for that 15-minute flyaround and
redocking. Then the next day, the Progress vessel will be automatically
redocked to the Kvant-1 module, placing the Mir in the same configuration
it is in today.
Solovyev, Vinogradov and Foale will then conduct their final spacewalk
preparations, leading to the scheduled internal spacewalk by Solovyev
and Vinogradov August 20 to attempt to regain access to the power generated
by the solar arrays on the Mir's Spektr module.
American astronaut Wendy Lawrence is scheduled to take over for Foale
onboard Mir in September. This week Lawrence had her final medical
examinations, and wrap-up training on her phase of the ongoing greenhouse
experiment.
David Wolf, slated to follow Lawrence onboard Mir next January, concentrated
this week on the communications systems of the Mir Space Station; he
also underwent medical exams and continued his physical training.
Wolf's back-up, astronaut Andy Thomas, spent his week in Russian language
classes, attending lectures on the Mir's design and layout, and being
fitted for his customized Soyuz seat liner.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of August 1, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
Interview with Mike
Foale - Mike Foale answers questions posed by CBS News correspondent
Bill Harwood
Status Briefing
- Frank Culbertson and Valery Ryumin announce plans to send David Wolf
to the Mir and answer questions from the press
As American astronaut Mike Foale and his Russian crewmates onboard
the space station Mir get themselves and the station ready for next
week's planned arrival of a new pair of cosmonauts, NASA and the Russian
space program have made a change in the assignment of the American who
will succeed Foale onboard the station to extend the Shuttle-Mir program
into 1998.
Astronaut David Wolf, a medical doctor and engineer who has been training
in Russia since August of last year for the final scheduled increment
of the American mission to the Mir, has been moved up in the rotation
to fly on the next Shuttle-Mir docking mission and relieve Foale. He's
replacing astronaut Wendy Lawrence, with whom he has been training as
a back-up for this mission, due to changes in the desired requirements
for Americans serving on Mir, which are a result of the recent on-orbit
collision sustained by the Russian station.
The impact of an unmanned Progress supply ship with the Mir's Spektr
module on June 25th left the station without access to power from the
Spektr's solar arrays, and plans have been laid for a series of spacewalks
to recover access to those arrays and to examine the exterior of Spektr
to assess the damage; other excursions to the exterior of the Mir to
recover U.S. science hardware were already on the flight plan for the
upcoming months.
In the weeks since the collision, both space agencies have discussed
the desirability of the American crewmember onboard the Mir being qualified
to conduct spacewalks, in the event the astronaut is needed to lend
assistance to the cosmonauts during the coming months. That was not
considered a requirement at the time Lawrence was selected for the program.
In a news conference from the Russian Mission Control Center in Korolev,
outside Moscow, NASA Shuttle-Mir Program Manager Frank Culbertson explained
that the tough decision to replace Lawrence was based on the fact that,
at 5'3", she does not fit in the Russian Orlan spacesuit and could not
become qualified for spacewalking duty.
Wolf will now begin a course of training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training
Center's Hydrolab Facility to become familiar with working in the Russian
spacesuit, and if time permits he'll receive specific training on the
required task for the single spacewalk he's expected to make, to retrieve
hardware from the outside of the station. To ensure that he has time
to finish that instruction, it is expected that the planned launch date
for mission STS-86 will be delayed until late September.
Lawrence will continue training as a back-up for Wolf, and Culbertson
said she will fly as a crewmember on the next shuttle-mir docking mission
so she can assist in the handover from Foale to Wolf as well as in the
transfer of logistics and other supplies between the two spacecraft.
Culbertson said that a decision as to who will be assigned in Wolf's
place for the final trip to the Mir will be made in a couple of weeks,
and that astronaut Andy Thomas, currently training as the back-up for
that flight, is a likely candidate and will probably start spacewalk
training in Russia soon.
Meanwhile, in an interview this week Mike Foale described the crew's
response to the collision, including their feeling they might have to
abandon the Mir.
The station's batteries are now fully recharged, and the station's
pointing attitude to the Sun is being maintained automatically by the
gyrodynes. The crew has replaced a valve in the Vosdukh, the primary
system for removing carbon dioxide from the air, and it is now fully
operational. Oxygen is being supplied from tanks in the Progress vessel
docked to the station while the crew troubleshoots the Elektron oxygen
generation system, which has cycled off when activated over the last
two days.
Today is Foale's 77th day as a member of the Mir crew, and it is the
171st day on the station for his crewmates, Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin. The Mir-23 commander,
who continues to be closely monitored for any signs of an irregular
heartbeat that showed up in a routine electrocardiograph last month,
and his flight engineer are continuing a program of specialized exercise
to help prepare their bodies to re-encounter the pull of gravity after
more than six months in weightlessness.
Plans for scientific research onboard Mir by future visiting astronauts
have been modified as a result of the Progress collision with Spektr,
which has sharply reduced the power available to run experiment hardware.
Mike Foale said recovering access to Spektr's solar arrays is very important
to the continuation of on-board science, but he pointed out that pure
science is not the only reason for Americans to keep flying on the Russian
space station, noting that the recent unexpected events have provided
a great opportunity for learning to work together.
This week Foale reported that many of the second set of broccoli plant
seeds he'd planted in the greenhouse facility have sprouted, including
some seeds that were generated from the first set of plants. This is
the first time that a second generation of space-borne plants has ever
been grown.
The task of conducting the internal spacewalk, now scheduled for no
earlier than August 20, has been assigned to Mir-24 commander Anatoly
Solovyev and flight engineer Pavel Vinogradov. They will also perform
an external spacewalk to determine the character of the damage to the
Spektr module. They're scheduled to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome
in central Asia on Tuesday, August 5, at 10:35 a.m. CDT and dock to
the station two days later 12:03 p.m. CDT.
For the next six days, the five residents of the Russian space station
will hand over operational responsibility to the new crew of cosmonauts,
and on Thursday, August 14, Tsibliev and Lazutkin will climb into their
Soyuz capsule, undock from the station's transfer node, and conclude
a 185-day mission with a landing in central Asia.
On Friday, August 15, Solovyev, Vinogradov, and Foale will board the
remaining Soyuz capsule for a 15-minute flyaround, redocking at the
transfer node docking port. The next day, ground controllers will redock
the Progress resupply ship to the station's Kvant-1 module.
On Monday and Tuesday the 18th and 19th all three crewmembers will
be busy with final preparations for the internal spacewalk, and then,
if all remains on schedule, on August 20th Foale will get in the Soyuz
capsule while Solovyev and Vinogradov, wearing Russian Orlan spacesuits,
depressurize the transfer node, open the hatch to the Spektr module,
and conduct an internal spacewalk aimed at regaining access to Spektr's
solar arrays.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
_______________________________________________________________
Mir-23 - Week of August 8, 1997
Mission Status Report - Filed
from Mir Mission Control in Moscow
On Tuesday a Soyuz capsule carrying the Mir-24 cosmonauts Anatoly Solovyev
and Pavel Vinogradov launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakstan,
and on Thursday successfully docked to the station's Kvant-1 docking
port, and Solovyev and Vinogradov entered what will be their home until
early next year.
From now until next Thursday, the new cosmonaut crew will be taking
over operational responsibility from Mir-23 commander Vasily Tsibliev
and flight engineer Aleksandr Lazutkin, who will then return to Earth
after 185 days on orbit.
Aided by American astronaut Mike Foale, Solovyev and Vinogradov will
then begin preparations for a spacewalk the two Russians plan to make
no earlier than August 20th. With Foale participating from inside the
Soyuz capsule, Solovyev and Vinogradov will attempt to install a piece
of hardware in the hatch to the Spektr module that will allow the crew
to recover access to power from Spektr's solar arrays.
Power from those arrays was lost when the cables were disconnected
and the hatch to Spektr closed after an unmanned cargo craft collided
with Spektr in late June and breached its hull. Solovyev and Vinogradov
have also been trained for a spacewalk outside the station, perhaps
in early September, to assess the damage from that collision.
Astronaut David Wolf, who is now scheduled to relieve Foale onboard
the Mir, spent most of this past week conducting spacewalk training,
while wearing scuba gear, in the Hydrolab facility at the Gagarin Cosmonaut
Training Center in Star City, Russia, outside Moscow. Wolf, who is qualified
for spacewalk duty in an American spacesuit, could begin his underwater
training in the Russian Orlan spacesuit next week.
| 3/7/97 | 3/14/97
| 3/21/97 | 3/28/97
| 4/4/97 | 4/11/97
| 4/18/97 | 4/25/97
|
| 5/2/97 | 5/9/97
| 5/16/97 | 5/23/97
| 5/30/97 | 6/6/97
| 6/13/97 | 6/20/97
|
| 6/27/97 | 7/4/97
| 7/11/97 | 7/18/97
| 7/25/97 | 8/1/97
| 8/8/97 |
|
| TOC | Site
Map |
Photo Gallery | Video Gallery
| Diagrams | Welcome
| Search |
|