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On February 7, NASA’s space shuttle
Atlantis successfully lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida, carrying European Space Agency’s most advanced laboratory,
Columbus, into space. Seven astronauts are in charge of getting Columbus safe
and sound to the International Space Station (ISS) in the 11-day journey before
the mission had run its course.
It took a while before the space
shuttle Atlantis was successfully launched – two months of continuous delays
and uncertainties – but the mission finally took off on Thursday, with the
destination: International Space Station. It is for the second time in seven
years that the ISS gets ready to receive a science laboratory, after the
U.S.-built Destiny Laboratory Module, activated in February 2001.
On February 9, the space shuttle
Atlantis is set to dock with the International Space Station at 18:23 CET. The following
day, the Columbus Module will be removed from the space shuttle’s cargo by a
robotic arm and docked to the starboard hatch of the Harmony module. Columbus
will be ready to conduct experiments within hours after it has been docked.
Within the next days, several
spacewalks are set to take place, the first of which will include astronaut
Hans Schlegel, who will assist the manoeuvre of removing the Columbus Module
from the space shuttle. Other two spacewalks will take place while Atlantis is
docked to the ISS for installing external science payloads and handrails to the
module.
Out of the team of seven, made
up of commander of the crew and NASA astronaut Steve Frick, pilot Alan
Pointdexter and mission specialists Leland Melvin, Rex Walheim, Stanley Love,
and also Hans Schlegel and Leopold Eyharts from the European Space Agency, it
will be the French astronaut Leopold Eyharts' mission to remain on the ISS for
two more months to supervise the Columbus laboratory.
The Columbus laboratory, which is
7m long and weights 12.8 tons, will enable scientists aboard the International
Space Station to conduct a series of experiments in a weightless environment on
a wide range of topics, such as fluid physics, material sciences, technology,
biology and life sciences, in conditions that are not possible on Earth.
After the Columbus Module will
be connected to the ISS, the European Space Agency’s Columbus Control Center
located in the German Space Agency facility in Oberpfaffenhofen will be
responsible for monitoring Columbus’ activities and provide communications
links with control centers from Russia and the United States.
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