Sts-74

STS-74 is a Space Shuttle program mission.
Space Shuttle program
Mission Insignia

250px
Mission Statistics
Mission:STS-74
Shuttle:Atlantis
Launch Pad: 39-A
Launch: November 12, 1995 at 7:30:43.071 A.M. EST.
Landing: KSC November 20, 1995 at 12:01:27 pm EST on Runway 33.
Duration:8 days, 4 hours, 31 minutes, 42 seconds
Orbit Altitude:213 nautical miles (394 km)
Orbit Inclination: 51.6 degrees
Distance Traveled:3.4 million miles (5.5 million km)
Crew photo
300px
Previous Mission:
STS-73
Next Mission:
STS-72

Crew

Mission Parameters

2nd Mir docking mission

Mission Highlights

The STS-74 mission is the second of seven planned Space Shuttle-Mir link-ups between 1995 and 1997, including rendezvous and docking and crew transfers, which will pave the way toward assembly of the international Space Station beginning in November 1997. Major objectives include docking with the Mir space station and delivery of a Russian docking module and 2 solar arrays. This mission marks the first time astronauts from the European Space Agency, Canada, Russia and the U.S will be in space on the same complex at one time -- a prime example of nations that will be represented on the international Space Station. Atlantis will carry the Russian-built Docking Module, which has multi-mission androgynous docking mechanisms at top and bottom. During the flight to Mir, the crew will use the Orbiter's Remote Manipulator System robot arm to hoist the Docking Module from the payload bay and berth its bottom androgynous unit atop Atlantis' Orbiter Docking System. Atlantis will then dock to Kristall using the Docking Module's top androgynous unit. After three days, Atlantis will undock from the Docking Module's bottom androgynous unit and leave the Docking Module permanently docked to Kristall, where it will provide clearance between the Shuttle and Mir's solar arrays during subsequent dockings. Atlantis will deliver water, supplies, and equipment, including two new solar arrays -- one Russian and one jointly-developed -- to upgrade the Mir. It will return to Earth experiment samples, equipment for repair and analysis and products manufactured on the station. Also flying aboard Atlantis is the GPP payload consisting of two experiments -- the GPP experiment and the Photogrammetric Appendage Structural Dynamics Experiment (PASDE). The payload is managed by Goddard Space Flight Center's Special Payloads Division. The GPP will study the Earth's thermosphere, ionosphere and mesosphere energetics and dynamics using broadband spectroscopy. GPP also will study spacecraft interactions with the atmosphere by observing Shuttle and Mir glow, Shuttle engine firings, water dumps and fuel cell purges. Three PASDE canisters, located throughout the cargo bay, will photogrammetrically record structural response data of the Mir solar arrays during the docked phase of the mission. These data will be analyzed on the ground to verify the use of photogrammetric techniques to characterize the structural dynamics of the array, thus demonstrating that this technology can result in cost and risk reduction for the international Space Station on-orbit structural verification. Atlantis will also carry back to earth the University of California at Berkeley Trek Experiment which has been in orbit onboard Mir for the past four years.

Related articles

External links

Previous Mission:
STS-73
Space Shuttle program Next Mission:
STS-72
STS-074 STS-074

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
sticky (economics)
prevlaka
savitri devi
jonang
christmas on mars
milwaukee art museum
kalanchoe
list of cruiser classes of the royal navy
kurt browning
duomo di siena
grand theft auto: london, 1969
colonia dignidad
fool's errand
goosebumps
counts of provence
sts 66
pipistrellus
typhoon class submarine
sts 63
sts 67
frances dee
blue's clues
sts 71
sts 70
sts 69
sts 73
sts 72
sts 76
sts 77
campo dei miracoli
sts 78
tijuana bible
nicholas ray
sts 79
nova friburgo
sts 80
vladimir kovalyonok
bokeljs
nicaraguan institute of natural resources and the environment
bristol aerospace
power rangers: wild force
p branes
poet laureate consultant in poetry to the library of congress
rudolf bultmann