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The shuttle Discovery has been
given a green light for the May 31 launch, when it will engage in the second of
three flights to launch components of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s
Kibo laboratory. The announcement was made on Monday, during a press conference
held at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, following the Flight Readiness
Review.
According to Shuttle Launch
Director Mike Leinbach, all preparations are going well. He also added that
shuttle work crews will be able to get some time off for the Memorial Day
holiday, due to a smooth processing flow of the pre-launch preparations, and
return in time for the launch.
Discovery’s STS-124 mission is
to install the Kibo’s Japanese Pressurized Module (JPM) and its remote
manipulator system (RMS) on the International Space Station, following the successful
installation of the Japanese Experiment Logistics Module, during mission
STS-123.
Before any launch, two
Flight Readiness Reviews need to be conducted, a program-level review and an
executive-level review. The shuttle prepares for a 14-day flight to the
International Space Station, carrying the largest payload so far (the Kibo
pressurized module alone weights 32,000 pounds).
Discovery will also be in charge
of delivering new station crew member Greg Chamitoff and bringing Flight
Engineer Garrett Reisman back home, after three months aboard the International
Space Station, NASA announced.
The STS-124 mission will include
three spacewalks, as follows: on day 4, astronauts Ronald J. Garan Jr. and Michael
E. Fossum will transfer the Orbiter Boom Sensor back to the shuttle from its
temporary location (during the last mission, the Boom Sensor was left at the
station for lack of room) and then prepare for the JPM removal from the shuttle’s
payload bay.
The second spacewalk will take place
two days after the first one. Garan and Fossum will have the mission to install
covers and external television equipment on the JPM and remove covers on the RMS,
as well as prepare for the flight day 7 relocation of the Japanese Logistics Module.
The third and final spacewalk
will be performed by the same astronauts, whose primary mission will be to
replace a failed hydrogen tank assembly on the station’s truss with a spare one
that has been temporarily stored on one of the station’s external stowage
platforms.
Image Credit: www.nasa.gov
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