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Where Dreams Take Flight

Saturday, July 31, 2010 

SECONEDENclip_image002_vSM Where will you go when you die? Get the facts. Visit the NEW SECOND EDEN WEB site.

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MAGAZINE

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NEWS...

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FLYING OFF THE HANDLE (Commentary and Opinion)

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Martian_AnkhV_VerySM   Read Second Eden, the sci-fi thriller that predicted Bird Flu, predicts evidence of life on Mars and more. Find out how.
“I have read a lot of the classic SF writers and Second Eden ranks right up there with the best. Very well done.”
--Reader J. Duncan
June 2006

Space Shuttle Flight Status Report --via NASA--Feb. 2005

The Space Shuttle fleet is housed and processed at NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Fla. The order the Space Shuttles are listed does not necessarily reflect the chronological order of future missions.

Discovery (OV-103)

Mission: STS-114; 17th ISS Flight (LF1) - Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Discoverysts114-s-001_PatchSM

Vehicle: Discovery (OV-103)

Location: Orbiter Processing Facility Bay 3

Launch Date: Launch Planning Window May 12 - June 3, 2005

Launch Pad: 39B

Discoverysts114-s-002Md
Crew: Collins, Kelly, Noguchi, Robinson, Thomas, Lawrence and Camarda

Inclination/Orbit Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles

Processing continues in the Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF) for Return to Flight mission (STS-114) to the International Space Station. Testing of the thousands of systems onboard Discovery is 80 percent complete. Preparations for leak tests of the crew module were performed yesterday. Main Propulsion System leak checks are complete.

Following final checkout, testing and installation of the avionics box, the new Orbiter Boom Sensor System (OBSS) was transferred from the Remote Manipulator System lab in the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) to the OPF Thursday. The boom is scheduled for installation into the starboard side of Discovery's payload bay early next week. The 50-foot-long OBSS will attach to the Remote Manipulator System Shuttle robotic arm. It is one of the new safety measures for Return to Flight, equipping the orbiter with cameras and laser systems to inspect the Shuttle's Thermal Protection System while in space.

In integrated operations in the VAB, the team is working final closeouts of the stacked Solid Rocket Boosters for STS-114. The External Tank (ET) is located in the checkout cell, and technicians have completed the aft hard-point closeout foam spray. The aft hard-point is an area of the tank where the ET is mated to the transporter. Foam is not applied to that area at the Michoud Assembly Facility, La., to avoid during transport to Kennedy Space Center.

 

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