The crew of STS-124 participated Friday in a launch dress
rehearsal at NASA's Kennedy Space Center
in Florida. Part
of the three-day terminal countdown demonstration test, the rehearsal called
for the astronauts to be fully suited for liftoff as they simulated the final
hours of the countdown.
Friday afternoon, the astronauts returned to their home base
at NASA's Johnson Space Center
in Houston.
They'll report to Kennedy once again a few days before their launch aboard
space shuttle Discovery, currently targeted for May 31.
Navy Cmdr. Mark E. Kelly will command the STS-124 shuttle mission. Navy Cmdr.
Kenneth T. Ham will serve as the pilot. Mission
specialists will include NASA astronauts Karen L. Nyberg; Air Force Col. Ronald
J. Garan Jr. and Air Force Reserve Col. Michael E. Fossum. Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Akihiko Hoshide also will serve as a
mission specialist.
Space shuttle Discovery’s upcoming STS-124 mission is the
second of three flights that will launch components to complete the Japan
Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo laboratory. The shuttle crew will install
Kibo’s large Japanese Pressurized Module, or JPM, and its remote manipulator
system, or RMS. The RMS consists of two robotic arms that support operations
outside of Kibo.
The RMS Main Arm can handle up to 14,000 pounds of hardware
and the Small Fine Arm, when attached to the Main Arm, handles more delicate
operations. Each arm has six joints that mimic the movements of a human arm. The lab's logistics
module, which was installed in a temporary location during STS-123 in March,
will be attached to the new lab.
The bus-sized module will be the station’s largest
laboratory and will be the second component of Japan's laboratory complex to fly
to the station. The first, the Japanese Experiment Logistics Module, was
launched in March on shuttle mission STS-123.
The Kibo pressurized module weighs in at 32,000 pounds. It
is so large that the shuttle’s Orbiter Boom Sensor System was left at the
station during the last mission. There is not room in Discovery's cargo bay for
both the boom and the lab.
A third and final shuttle mission to complete the complex
will launch an exterior platform for the Kibo laboratory complex that will
allow experiments to be exposed to space.
The STS-124 mission carries the heaviest payload to the
station and it will include three spacewalks. On flight day 4, Garan and Fossum will transfer the Orbiter
Boom Sensor System back to the shuttle from its temporary location of the station’s
truss, or backbone. The crew will then prepare the JPM for its removal from the shuttle’s payload
bay. Later that day, the JPM will be installed on the port side of Harmony.
Two days after, in
the second spacewalk, Garan and Fossum will install covers and external
television equipment on the JPM and remove covers on the RMS, which will be
deployed on flight day 8. The spacewalkers also will prepare for the flight day
7 relocation of the Japanese logistics module.
During the third and final spacewalk, Garan and Fossum will
primarily work to replace a failed nitrogen tank assembly on the station’s
truss with a spare that was temporarily stored on one of the station external
stowage platforms.
The shuttle also will deliver a new crew member, Greg
Chamitoff, and bring back another one, Garrett Reisman, after a three-month
mission.