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Florida landing, with the first opportunity beginning with a deorbit burn at 15:25 UTC, and landing at 16:32 UTC. The second opportunity would call for a deorbit burn at 17:00 UTC, with landing at 18:16 UTC. Weather was not expected to interfere with landing, with a forecast of high clouds, but no inclement weather. If the second landing opportunity was taken, the shuttle would fly directly over
Hurricane Dean, although it would be well above any effects of the storm. NASA did plan to call up Edwards Air Force Base as the backup site, which had two opportunities on Tuesday, but the plan was to attempt a KSC landing, and if both opportunities were waved off, NASA would decide whether to wait a day, and try for a Wednesday landing at KSC. If Wednesday opportunities at Florida were waved off due to weather, a landing at Edwards Air Force Base would be attempted.
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2088:'s continued path into the Gulf of Mexico. The EVA duration was five hours and 2 minutes, with a total EVA time of 23 hours and 15 minutes for the mission. The EVA accomplished three primary objectives, and one get-ahead task. Two tasks were deferred: plans to tie down debris shields on the Destiny lab, and relocation of a tool box. During the spacewalk, Williams and Anderson got a good look at Hurricane Dean, and were both awed at the sight. "Holy smoke" was Anderon's initial comment. "Man, that's impressive", Williams replied. Anderson added "They're only impressive when they're not coming towards you." Transfer activities were completed ahead of schedule, and both crews worked hard to get everything transferred back to
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was done, and no concerns were identified. The paths taken by astronauts during spacewalks were reviewed, identifying common paths between the third EVA, and
Saturday's planned EVA, and the crew was notified of the common locations, to identify areas where additional glove inspections would be performed on Saturday. Overall, the final EVA would be less "hand-intensive" than the previous spacewalks, and the conclusion following the analysis was that Saturday's EVA would go ahead as planned.
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other areas of risk. Shannon reported the results of the arc jet testing showed some erosion into the backside of the adjacent tile upon re-entry, but the erosion did not go through the entire layer of the tile. Preliminary results were encouraging, but additional testing would be performed on
Wednesday night. Shannon reported that the final decision would most likely be made on Thursday. Shannon said "I am cautiously optimistic that repairs will not be needed".
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selection as NASA's first mission specialist educator in 1998. Morgan completed two years of training and evaluation and began official duties in 2000. An
Educator Astronaut is a fully trained astronaut who performs all the same duties that a regular astronaut does. Morgan became the first mission specialist educator in space on STS-118, and will share what she learned from the experience with students during and after her flight.
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truss. During a routine glove inspection, Mastracchio noticed a possible tear on the thumb of his left glove. To be safe, NASA managers decided to end the spacewalk at 20:05, and examination and photography of the glove was performed during suit removal. The spacewalk accomplished all but one of the tasks (MISSE retrieval). On the station, the crewmembers continued with transfer activities.
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1336:. These upgrades will allow orbiters to remain docked at the station for an additional three to four mission days by saving cryogenic liquid hydrogen and oxygen needed to run the fuel cells which generate electricity aboard the orbiter; oxygen and hydrogen tank capacity is a major factor limiting the duration of orbiter free flights. Other systems debuting on this flight were a three-string
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the decision of the
Mission Management Team to extend the mission to 14 days, and to add a fourth EVA, was unanimous. He noted that the addition of SSPTS will be a valuable new tool, providing not only extended missions, but also the ability to provide the space station with additional supplies of oxygen, water, and other resources.
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variety of risks, and those risks weighed heavily into the final decision. He noted the arc jet tests actually showed a higher degree of damage than the orbiter would sustain during re-entry, so the tests were helpful in showing the worst "possible" damage, and still did not damage the tile during testing enough to warrant repair.
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without problems. In addition, a new
Russian computer was installed on the station, and testing of the system would be performed in late August. He also mentioned several of the experiments that were launched with STS-118, and reported all experiments were proceeding well. Shireman also noted that as of 15:17 UTC, the
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sure the flow would concentrate in the back "well" of the hole. The engineers and analysts would continue to do additional flow modeling, after which they would take the data into the arc jet testing facility for additional analysis. The first preliminary arc jet tests would be performed Monday night.
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During the post-landing crew press conference, Kelly was asked "Did the tile damage enter your mind at all during re-entry, and what did you think about it once you got a look during the walkaround?" Kelly's reply was, "I thought about it, but only because I knew I'd be asked about it. I didn't worry
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successfully undocked from the
International Space Station at 11:56 UTC. Saturday, NASA managers decided the station fly-around that is normally performed following each mission would not be conducted in order to give the Shuttle crew more free time during flight day 12. After several long work days,
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EVA Office
Manager Steve Doering reported on the decision to proceed with Saturday's EVA. The team analyzed the video downlinked from the third EVA, and the review showed no evidence of any specific event that would indicate a sharp edge, or excessive wear. A review of the manufacturing of the gloves
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The station and shuttle crews had a relatively quiet day on flight day 10, continuing transfer operations, and doing some troubleshooting on a communication system between the shuttle and station. The two crews took some time out to have a joint news conference with US and
Canadian news agencies, and
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Shannon reported on a micro-meteoroid debris strike discovered on the commander's window of the orbiter, which was 1 millimeter in depth. Shannon noted that it was consistent with previous damage sustained on past missions. Analysis would be conducted regarding this issue, using photographs sent down
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Shannon did note that the JSC Engineering
Independent Group advised NASA managers that repairing the damage on-orbit could assist with mission turn-around time once the orbiter was on the ground. Shannon noted that the risks associated with in-flight repair outweighed the possible delay in processing
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Shannon reported a "team four" had been assembled, along with the operations and engineering teams, to assist in data analysis. The teams will look at options for repair if required, and make recommendations to the Mission Management Team after the analysis of tests and data. Shannon stated he had no
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The Spacehab Logistics Single Module, a pressurized aluminum habitat that is carried inside the payload bay, has a capacity of 6,000 pounds (2,700 kg), and carried a variety of cargo and research projects, including supply materials for the ISS. It returned cargo, including the MISSE PEC 3 &
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During the post-landing briefing, NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin reported that the International Space Station was approximately 60% completed following STS-118. Griffin also stressed the importance of space exploration, and added that the damaged tile on the underside of the orbiter did very
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Initial post-landing inspection of the orbiter showed very little additional damage to the thermal tiles affected by the foam strike during launch. Barbara Morgan did not exit the crew transport vehicle with the rest of the crew; she remained on board the vehicle to receive additional medical tests,
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John Shannon reported the mission management team meeting went well. The landing plan was reviewed, and all teams reported "go" for landing on Tuesday. The latest track for Hurricane Dean was favorable for the Houston area; the storm seemed to be swinging farther south than originally expected. NASA
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once it gets back on the ground. They seem to be confident, and I trust their confidence that we can get home safely even with the divot that we have in the belly," Morgan added "We have a lot of faith in the program, and we'll do what the engineers decide is the best thing for us to do. We have all
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s heat shield and re-entry issues. He reported that after initial modeling they believe the majority of heating will be on the backside of the gouge, and not into the filler bar side, which was the preferable situation. He reiterated that it was a complicated aerodynamic shape, and they wanted to be
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In the daily mission status briefing, Lead Flight Director Matt Abbott announced the official extension of the mission, that the SSPTS was working as planned, and they were pleased with the data gathered during the focused inspection on Sunday. Mission Management Team Chairman John Shannon confirmed
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At the end of the briefing, Griffin commented to the media who focused on Barbara Morgan being the first "teacher in space", that Morgan was not technically a "teacher in space", nor was she an "educator astronaut". He stated she was accepted as a mission specialist, before the new class of mission
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performed a variety of check-out tests in preparation for entry, configured the Spacehab module for entry, and did some last minute stowage. Kelly and Hobaugh worked with the shuttle landing simulator on board, practicing the anticipated landing tracks. Kelly, Williams and Morgan took some time out
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Mission Management Team chair John Shannon reported after additional analysis, it appeared that a piece of foam came off the external tank in the area of the tank's feed line, and bounced off a nearby strut, resulting in a hit to the orbiter's underside. An almost identical section of foam was lost
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Group reported to Entry Team Flight Director Steve Stich that the weather forecast was a "go". The weather at Kennedy Space Center showed only scattered showers moving away from the landing facility, and cross winds were not expected to be a problem. At 15:08 UTC, the crew was given a "go" for the
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reported that the Mission Management Team decided to take extra precautions in preparation for the storm, and STS-118 would be cut short a day. In the event of a hurricane evacuation in Houston, an emergency command center would need to be set up. While it was a contingency set in place for years,
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During the mission status briefing, Lead Flight Director Matt Abbott discussed the ongoing preparations and plans with regards to Hurricane Dean, and reported NASA was watching the storm's track closely. If required, contingency plans are available. While the mission's timeline could be changed if
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During the Mission Management Team briefing, Joel Montalbano reported that the issue with Mastracchio's suit was never a danger to the suit integrity, and the decision to cut the EVA short was one of precaution. Extended photography was performed, and additional analysis will be completed prior to
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Shannon reported on the focused inspection, confirming that good laser data and imagery was obtained, and they resolved several areas of interest, classifying them as of no concern. One area of interest was two adjacent thermal plates on the shuttle's underside that had a gouge that appeared to be
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crew members could take digital pictures of the heat shield of the orbiter. The images were then analyzed by NASA's Image Analysis Team, as well as the Mission Management Team to inspect the integrity of the orbiter's heat shield. Following a series of leak checks, the hatches were opened at 20:04
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on January 28, 1986. While McAuliffe and Morgan were classified as spaceflight participants and not as mission specialists in 1986, after the Teacher in Space Project was canceled, Morgan assumed the duties of Teacher in Space Designee and continued to work with NASA's Education Division until her
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went right to work after waking up on Tuesday, completing the close-out of the Spacehab module, and getting into the deorbit preparations timeline. They closed payload bay doors, transitioned the vehicle computers to landing software mode and donned their reentry suits. At 14:30 UTC, the crew was
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When pressed during the briefing by a reporter as to the chance of shuttle or crew loss, Shannon reported "I am 100 percent comfortable that the work that has been done, has accurately characterized the damage, and that we will have a very successful re-entry". He stated that over 200 people were
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John Shannon reported that no decision had been made regarding the tile damage on the underside of the orbiter, but the fourth EVA was postponed to at least August 18, 2007. The management team would continue to analyze the potential risks of repair to the underside of the orbiter, as well as any
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During the Mission Management Team briefing, Kirk Shireman, Deputy International Space Station Program Manager, reported that the External Stowage Platform installation went well; the new CMG was working well, and handover of attitude control directly from the shuttle to the station was completed
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tiles. The tile directly aft of the door had a 3.5 inches (8.9 cm) by 2 inches (5.1 cm) gouge in it. While the tile was penetrated, the underlying felt backing was not. NASA noted in the press conference that launch-time video confirmed a foam strike. This area is less critical than the
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reported the damage was actually less than what the arc jet testing produced, a situation that NASA anticipated, and managers had earlier stressed that arc jets show "worst possible" damage. Launch Director Mike Leinbach stressed how pleased he was with the mission, and with the condition of the
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During the Mission Management Team briefing, John Shannon announced the team's unanimous decision that an EVA to repair the damaged tile was not required, and the tile damage on the underside of the orbiter was not a threat to crew safety. However, the spacewalk to repair the damage could pose a
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Rick Mastracchio and Clayton Anderson began the third EVA of the mission at 14:37 UTC. During the EVA, they successfully relocated a CETA Cart, retrieved the P6 Transponder, relocated the S-band antenna from P6 to P1, and installed a new S-Band Baseband Signal Processor and Transponder on the P1
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Fueling of the external tank began at 08:11 EDT (12:11 UTC) and finished around 11:00 EDT. The Ice Team began their inspection of the orbiter to ensure no ice was on the orbiter or the fuel tank, something unlikely due to the unusually warm conditions as launch time approached. Their inspection
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During the mission status briefing, Entry Flight Director Steve Stich reported the track of Hurricane Dean would not require the activation of contingency plans, and the forecast looked favorable for a Tuesday landing at Kennedy Shuttle Landing Facility. There were also two opportunities for a
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Deputy ISS Program Manager Kirk Shireman reported the S-Band system relocated during the third EVA was working well, and the SSPTS provided enough oxygen to be able to completely fill all reserves on the station. Shireman commented that transfer operations were approximately 75% complete.
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happened at 16:19 UTC. At 16:20 UTC, the shuttle had passed the area of peak heating, with no issues reported on board. Main landing gear touchdown occurred at 16:32:16 UTC with nose gear touchdown at 16:32:29 UTC. The orbiter came to a complete stop at 16:33:20 UTC. Upon wheel stop,
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concluded about 40 minutes quicker than the usual two-hour duration. The crew departed for the Operations & Checkout (O&C) building, for the launch pad at 14:46 EDT (18:46 UTC), and arrived at the pad at 15:02 EDT (19:02 UTC). Launch occurred at 18:36:42 EDT (22:36:42 UTC).
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specialist educators were selected in 2004, and NASA considers her to be a mission specialist, who was once a teacher. However, NASA does refer to Morgan as a mission specialist educator in a number of interviews, so the terms seem to be interchangeable to most, if not to Griffin.
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John Shannon reported that the orbiter systems were in excellent shape, and had no issues. With regards to the remaining area of tile damage on the underside of the orbiter, Shannon reported that initial thermal analysis had been completed. Computational fluid dynamics testing at
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NASA would prefer to avoid that situation. To that end, Cain reported the EVA was shortened, and the hatch closure would be done Saturday evening, rather than Sunday as planned. Undocking would be at 11:57 UTC Sunday, with the first KSC Landing opportunity on August 21, 2007.
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The high-definition video camera used to inspect the shuttle from Kennedy Space Center during launch failed prior to liftoff. The launch team decided that the cameras on the external tank and the orbiter would be sufficient for observations, and went on to launch without
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The Ice Team members discovered a small crack in the foam surrounding the external fuel tank during their preflight examination. After a review by the Mission Management Team, it was concluded that there was no debris issue regarding the crack, and the tank was safe to
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on July 19, 2007, and the Flight Readiness Review meetings were held on July 25–26, 2007, after which NASA managers declared STS-118 a "GO" for launch. The launch was delayed one day to repair a valve in the shuttle's crew cabin pressurization system.
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Overall, John Shannon classified the foam loss as a "concern", but only with regards to the history that the specific area has with regards to foam loss in past missions. Shannon reported that analysis would be complete by flight day 7 at the latest.
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mission, which would have involved the launch date being brought forward. If it had been needed, it would have been launched no earlier than September 22, 2007. The crew for this mission would have been a four-person subset of the full STS-120 crew.
2297:"You know, there's a great sense of pride to be able to be involved in a human endeavor that takes us all a little bit farther, when you look down and see our Earth... and you realize what we are trying to do as a human race, it's pretty profound."
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and would return to the Astronaut Crew Quarters in that vehicle. The remaining six crew members briefly examined the orbiter, doing the traditional post-flight "walkaround", posed for photos, and then returned to the crew quarters in the
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the orbiter following the mission. He stated that normal turn-around time would not be compromised, as most orbiters have at least 60 tiles replaced after each mission, so the situation would not be any different from past missions.
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John Shannon also reported that the possible protruding gap filler noticed on flight day 3, was reviewed further, and was determined to be "shim stock", which will burn off in the upper atmosphere, and poses no issues for re-entry.
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During the interview with Reuters, Drew stated "We've been talking to the engineers who have been analyzing this far more than we have in space, and they seem to feel that the biggest danger is more to just being able to re-use
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Shannon reported that the glove issue encountered during EVA three had been discussed, and stated that analysis would be continued, in advance of EVA four on Saturday. The crew does have a spare set of gloves, if needed.
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At the mission status briefing, Matt Abbott reported the undocking was "flawless", and the late inspection was completed successfully. Monday would be a standard pre-landing day, with checkout of the various systems on
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After preliminary review of the photos taken by the Expedition 15 crew during the RPM, an area of interest was discovered on the underside of the Shuttle; an area behind the right landing gear door covered with black
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to tap into the ISS power supply, converting up to eight kilowatts of electrical power from 120-volts direct-current (120VDC) ISS main voltage to the 28VDC system used by the orbiter. SSPTS was outfitted to the ISS
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deeper than would allow them to rule it out. NASA would use data from the focused inspection to model the area, and do thermal analysis of the area. They will use the data to mimic the damage with sample tiles at
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Commander Kelly and the crew arrived at Kennedy Space Center on August 3, 2007, for final launch preparations. The countdown clock began at 20:00 EDT August 5, 2007, for the launch at 18:36 EDT on August 8, 2007.
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had been done, and the preliminary results were "cautiously optimistic". Testing at the arc jet facility would continue Tuesday night. Shannon stated they would go through complete EVA scenario testing at the
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and Expedition 15 were notified that the SSPTS was working as expected, and the mission was officially extended to the planned 14-day mission. Commander Scott Kelly replied, "That's great news, thanks".
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truss. They also continued with transfer activities, and several crew members took time out to have two Public Affairs events, one of them answering children's questions from the Discovery Center in
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S-Band Antenna Structural Assembly (SASA) relocation from P6 to P1, installation of S-Band Baseband Signal Processor and Transponder to P1, CETA Cart relocation and P6 Transponder retrieval.
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EVA Office Manager Steve Doering reported on the details regarding the issue with Mastracchio's glove. The EVA inspection procedure was implemented following STS-116, when a cut was found on
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in 1986. The official STS-118 mission patch included a flame of knowledge that represented the importance of education, and honored teachers and students everywhere. Morgan was the backup to
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to the station, increasing the total mass of the ISS to 232,693 kilograms (513,000 lb). The EVA duration was 6 hours and 17 minutes, and all objectives were successfully completed.
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Lead spacewalk officer Paul Boehm agreed that the EVA went well, the major objectives were completed, and he reiterated that at no time was Mastracchio's suit in any danger of leaking.
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clarified at a post-mission press conference that Morgan was not considered a mission specialist educator, but rather a standard mission specialist, who had once been a teacher.
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Rick Mastracchio and Dave Williams completed the mission's second spacewalk, successfully achieving all of the scheduled activities. During the EVA, they removed a new CMG from
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A problem with the switches associated with the crew hatch required a second and third hatch closure attempt. Hatch closure was completed and verified at 17:23 EDT (21:23 UTC).
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vehicle following re-entry. He stated it was "one of the cleanest vehicles the managers have seen since the Return to Flight policies were implemented, if not the cleanest."
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Joel Montalbano reported that the SSPTS was working well, and the recommendation to the Mission Management Team will be to extend the mission to the planned 14-day mission.
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At 19:46, a short farewell ceremony was performed, followed by hatch closure at 20:10 UTC. Tuesday's tentative KSC landing time would be 12:32 pm EST. (16:30 UTC)
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took the official combined crew portrait. When asked by reporters on the ground whether the crew agreed with NASA's decision to return without repairing the damage to
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managers were optimistic that contingency plans would not be needed. Final decisions regarding alternate plans would not be made until Monday, but Shannon noted that
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1968:, and Founding Chairman of the Challenger Center. Morgan and Drew also spoke to reporters from the Associated Press, Reuters and Idaho Public Television.
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notified commander Kelly that the Mission Management Team decided that no repair to the damaged tile on the underside of the orbiter would be required.
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had originally been selected for this flight, for what would have been its 29th mission, and its first and likely only visit to the ISS, mainly due to
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deorbit burn, and the auxiliary power units were started at 15:20 UTC. The 4-minute engine burn was successfully completed at 15:28 UTC, slowing
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crew awoke on Tuesday to the voices of Tracy Caldwell's family singing happy birthday to her. The two crews successfully removed the ESP-3 from
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doubt that if a repair was required, the crew could execute it without significant impact to the mission timeline. He reiterated that this was
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Shannon did report that following STS-118, NASA will do a thorough review of the history of foam loss from the area of the external tank since
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moved from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39A. Moving at less than one mile per hour (1.6 kilometres (0.99 mi)/h) atop the
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Return to Flight missions experimented with various repair materials and techniques, and the STS-118 crew has trained for those procedures.
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contained over 850 materials specimens that will be studied to determine the effects of long-term exposure to the environment of space.
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Dave Williams set two records during his third EVA; He is the Canadian with the most spacewalks (3); and he passed Canadian Astronaut
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Whether you're teaching school, or whether you're training as an astronaut, you put all you can into it, and get the most out of it.
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are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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s return to flight after a planned orbiter re-fit and maintenance period that resulted in over 200 modifications to the orbiter.
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given the "go" to begin fluid loading. This was done to assist with the crew's ability to adjust to gravity, and to prevent
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Mission Specialists Barbara Morgan and Alvin Drew participated in an education event in the morning with students at the
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The station and shuttle crews continued transfer activities on flight day 9, as well as EVA preparations, which included
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successfully docked with the International Space Station at 18:02 UTC (14:02 EDT). Approximately an hour before docking,
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Following the procedures for post-ascent, the crew opened the payload bay doors, activated the Spacehab, powered up the
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Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
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On Monday, with the shuttle approximately 68 miles (109 km) behind the International Space Station, the crew of
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s underside, Commander Kelly replied, "We agree absolutely 100 percent with the decision to not repair the damage."
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2432:-3 and 4 experiments; EWIS Antenna Installation; Secured Z1 SASA gimbal locks in preparation for down mass on 10A.
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a catastrophic damage situation, but simply a situation that they would prefer to fix if possible, similar to the
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One of the most important modifications that debuted during STS-118 is an upgraded power-distribution module, the
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in total EVA time. Williams ended Saturday's EVA with a total of 17 hours, 47 minutes of extravehicular time.
1462:, the move began at 20:10 EDT, and was "hard down" (secured in place at the pad) at 03:02 EDT, July 11, 2007.
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by approximately 252 mph (406 km/h) and adjusting the orbiter's trajectory correctly for landing.
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flight engineer, uses a digital camera to expose a photo of his helmet visor during the mission's third EVA.
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915:
698:
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223:
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2157:, beginning Late Inspection of the reinforced carbon-carbon tiles on the nose cap and wing leading edges.
624:
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81:
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2636:
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1909:'s glove following an EVA. The EVA suit comprises five layers of material, and the second layer, called
1021:
From top to bottom: Orbiter docking system, Spacehab, S5 truss, ESP-3. The CMG is the globe bottom left.
969:
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by the ISS program. The mission added two more components to the ISS and brought supplies for its crew.
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High resolution image of thermal protective tiles taken during focused inspection on flight day five.
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The crew carried out the focused inspection without any problems, and at 20:56 (UTC), the crews of
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the fourth EVA. Montalbano reported that the fourth EVA would be no earlier than August 18, 2007.
7760:
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7618:
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7383:
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1363:, NASA's Teacher in Space candidate from 1985 to 1986. McAuliffe was killed in the Space Shuttle
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View of Hurricane Dean taken from the International Space Station during the fourth STS-118 EVA.
1920:
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also received several systems that the other orbiters had already been equipped with, such as a
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NASA press releases and media briefing documents stated that STS-118 was the first flight of a
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the Mission Control team felt the crew needed some downtime before the landing process began.
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NASA Managers decided overnight to shorten the fourth EVA by two hours as a precaution due to
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told the crew, "Congratulations, you've given a new meaning to the term 'higher education.'"
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1770:. After initial testing on the ground, NASA reported the new CMG was functioning normally.
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New components added to the International Space Station after flight STS-118/13A.1. (NASA)
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mentioned in the post-flight news conference that upon initial inspection on the ground, "
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There are three different on-orbit repair techniques available to the crew. Both post-
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665:, and engineers had found no evidence of heat-related damage to the orbiter itself.
661:". On August 31, 2007, NASA reported that the damaged tiles had been removed in the
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2177:, and Kennedy Shuttle Landing Facility would be the two sites evaluated on Monday.
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During and after the mission, the media focused heavily on a small puncture in the
7874:
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During the EVA, Mastracchio reported an EVA suit alarm, indicating high levels of
1628:. NASA once reported that pieces of foam are bound to, and have fallen off of the
837:
was originally slated to be launched to the ISS on this mission, but was moved to
2887:
had become disabled during STS-118. It would have been a modified version of the
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5279:
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2223:
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4020:"Spacewalk No. 4 moved from Friday to Saturday; no decision yet on tile repair"
2153:
from the station and move to a position above it. There, the crew deployed the
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2027:, which was heading towards the Caribbean Sea, and projected to move into the
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in 1986. The tip of the flames touched Morgan's name on the patch. However,
2102:
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required, no decision was made, and the mission was proceeding as planned.
1750:
1017:
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in November 2002, which was also the last successful shuttle flight before
4544:
3104:"Structural Inspections Find Enterprise in Better Than Expected Condition"
1450:(OV-105) was moved from the Orbiter Processing Facility, bay OPF-2 to the
1308:
altered the planned flight schedules, and the mission was rescheduled for
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The shuttle crew spent most of the day inspecting the outer hull and the
1359:, the first mission specialist educator. Morgan trained as the backup to
1164:
1041:
3827:"Update: Shannon said tile damage not considered a threat to astronauts"
1996:
involved in the decision, representing over 30 organizations, including
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to talk to students at the Canadian school, La Ronge, in Saskatchewan.
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payload that had been installed on the ISS. Launched in July 2006, the
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658:
602:
598:
550:
545:
3881:"Kelly downplays tile concern; Morgan said spaceflight worth the wait"
1945:
repair procedure review, in case NASA decided a repair was necessary.
1636:. An unprecedented 300 pieces of foam once struck the underside of an
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4464:"Astronaut Dave Williams sets Canadian record with third spacewalk"
3183:"NASA Assigns Washington, D.C., Native to Upcoming Shuttle Mission"
2068:
Morgan and Caldwell pose for a tribute photo, holding a picture of
1514:
Launch Director Mike Leinbach conducted his T-9 poll, and declared
649:
caused more damage and was in a critical area. KSC Launch Director
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438:
389:
379:
3330:"Vehicle Upgrades: Station-Shuttle Power Transfer System (SSPTS)"
2443:
NASA began a tradition of playing music to astronauts during the
2293:
Summarizing her thoughts on her time in space, Morgan commented,
645:
during liftoff, though the foam impact that ultimately destroyed
3411:"Biography of Barbara Morgan, first Mission Specialist Educator"
3212:
3010:
3002:
857:
68:
7259:
6154:
5137:
4914:
3519:"NASA Gives 'Go' for Shuttle Endeavour Launch on August 7"
3131:"Endeavour's performance during re-entry classed as phenomenal"
2110:
During the mission status briefing, Launch Integration Manager
1790:
During the Mission Management briefing, John Shannon discussed
3661:"Mission status briefing; tank appears to have performed well"
2130:
The International Space Station moves away from Space Shuttle
2012:, and that all the groups combined came to the same decision.
1595:
2072:
crewmembers, and behind them are tributes to their classmate
1530:
Main Engine Cutoff occurred at 18:45:30 pm EDT (22:45:30 UTC)
5368:
5360:
3939:"Mastracchio cuts spacewalk short after noting glove damage"
3634:"Space Shuttle Reference Manual – Thermal Protection System"
1579:
Preliminary image of damage to the thermal protective tiles.
1040:(CMG). The mission was also the final flight to include the
4518:"NASA orders shuttle home 1 day early because of hurricane"
1960:. The event was hosted by Dr. June Scobee Rodgers, wife of
4905:
1977:
confidence we're going to be able to do the right thing."
1865:
module of the station had orbited the Earth 50,000 times.
641:, created by a piece of insulation foam that came off the
3576:"Countdown on track; weather improves to 80 percent 'go'"
1590:
performed the one-degree-per-second backflip, called the
2173:
landing facility would be removed as an alternate site.
615:. STS-118 pilot Charles Hobaugh had been the entry team
3266:
Michael Griffin, NASA TV STS-118 Post-Landing briefing.
2447:, which was first used to wake up a flight crew during
1659:
Astronaut Rick Mastracchio works on the outside of the
1511:
The final forecast predicted 80% go for launch weather.
1032:
segment of the International Space Station, as well as
657:
appears to be the 'cleanest' post-flight orbiter since
4833:"NASA sets new launch date targets through to STS-124"
1682:
During the Mission Status press conference, Lead ISS
1675:
started the first EVA of the mission, installing the
1536:
separation occurred at 18:45:45 pm EDT (22:45:45 UTC)
856:. The Educator Astronaut Project is the successor to
4711:"Shuttle Endeavour glides to smooth Florida landing"
2881:
mission which would have been launched in the event
1296:
The mission was originally scheduled to be flown by
7940:
7896:
7807:
7741:
7695:
7669:
7611:
7550:
7441:
7396:
7350:
7310:
7163:
7090:
7035:
6813:
6432:
6220:
6199:
6188:
6080:
6057:
6011:
5849:
5717:
5551:
5380:
5189:
5111:
5097:
4952:
3079:. Microcom Systems. August 12, 2007. Archived from
2360:S5 Installation, P6 Radiator retraction and cinch.
2277:Associate Administrator for Spaceflight Operations
1603:crew welcomed the STS-118 crew aboard the station.
1527:
successfully separated at 18:39 pm EDT (22:39 UTC).
1521:
Liftoff occurred at 18:36:42 pm EDT. (22:36:42 UTC)
1352:, improved wing leading-edge sensors and the OBSS.
472:
460:
448:
434:
426:
408:
398:
388:
378:
368:
358:
353:
334:
318:
313:
291:
275:
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216:
208:
203:
187:
179:
161:
156:
140:
132:
108:
95:
74:
64:
56:
41:
4680:"Space shuttle Endeavour lands safely in Florida"
1395:22nd International Space Station assembly mission
4891:Behind the scenes at NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Lab
3465:"Second preflight Interview with Barbara Morgan"
1878:, to help develop the EVA procedures if needed.
1025:The STS-118 mission delivered and assembled the
4742:"Shuttle Glides Safely Home in Spite of Damage"
4321:"Hurricane threat may bring shuttle home early"
3384:"NASA's Space Shuttle Processing Status Report"
3157:"NASA's Space Shuttle Processing Status Report"
2428:OBSS Boom Stand Installation; Retrieval of the
2295:
1373:
4773:"Teacher-Astronaut, Crewmates Glad to be Home"
4124:"Shuttle crew awaits word on heat shield work"
3546:"Shuttle launch postponed; Crew flies to Cape"
2957:List of International Space Station spacewalks
2222:after landing. At 12:30 UTC, the Space Flight
7271:
6166:
5149:
4926:
3262:
3260:
3011:National Aeronautics and Space Administration
2988:National Aeronautics and Space Administration
2145:After undocking, two 4-second firings of the
1950:Challenger Center for Space Science Education
894:disaster, the crew manifest for STS-118 was:
578:. STS-118 lifted off on August 8, 2007, from
8:
4574:. San Francisco Chronicle/AP. Archived from
4294:"Astronauts relieved about skipping repairs"
3303:"Shuttle Endeavour's Stem-to-Stern Overhaul"
3296:
3294:
3067:
3065:
2290:about it at all. I was underwhelmed by it."
1837:moves the external stowage platform (ESP-3).
21:
4182:"NASA Rules Out Repair to Gouge in Shuttle"
1810:blanket issue during STS-117 in June 2007.
1632:during the eight and a-half-minute ride to
1518:a "go" for launch at 18:26 EDT (22:26 UTC).
16:2007 American crewed spaceflight to the ISS
7278:
7264:
7256:
6196:
6173:
6159:
6151:
5156:
5142:
5134:
4933:
4919:
4911:
4545:"Shuttle heads home, aiming to beat storm"
4379:"STS-118 Mission Status Briefing Graphics"
4213:"STS-118 Mission Status Briefing Graphics"
3912:"STS-118 Mission Status Briefing Graphics"
2453:
2382:Failed CMG removal; new CMG installation.
2198:Tuesday August 21 (Flight day 14, Landing)
896:
672:
502:
497:
86:
27:
20:
3438:"Preflight Interview with Barbara Morgan"
3355:Johnson Space Center (October 26, 2003).
3073:"ISS 13A.1 - Shuttle Endeavour (STS-118)"
1849:s payload bay, and installed it onto the
1478:Wednesday August 8 (Flight day 1, Launch)
4901:EVA Hazards due to Inspection and Repair
4570:Austin Peterson, Liz (August 20, 2007).
4240:"NASA Decides No Shuttle Repairs Needed"
4095:Austin Peterson, Liz (August 17, 2007).
3746:"Image of area of interest on Endeavour"
3492:"Endeavour prepped for return to flight"
2311:
1645:Station-to-Shuttle Power Transfer System
1194:
1058:
136:8,489,253 kilometres (5,274,977 mi)
4572:"Astronauts Prepare for Tuesday Return"
4470:from the original on September 27, 2007
4097:"NASA Optimistic No Shuttle Fix Needed"
4070:"NASA Nears Decision on Shuttle Repair"
3918:from the original on September 28, 2007
3752:from the original on September 28, 2007
3471:from the original on September 20, 2007
2994:
2468:
1754:One of the retrieved MISSE experiments.
4632:from the original on September 4, 2007
4605:from the original on November 23, 2007
4524:from the original on September 7, 2008
4385:from the original on November 22, 2007
4219:from the original on November 22, 2007
4134:from the original on February 28, 2023
3972:from the original on November 22, 2007
3779:from the original on November 23, 2007
3725:from the original on November 23, 2007
3586:from the original on November 22, 2010
3359:. Johnson Space Center. Archived from
3357:"NASA Presolicitation Notice: (SSPTS)"
3245:from the original on November 21, 2007
3017:from the original on December 23, 2007
1980:At 01:00 UTC, August 17, 2007, CAPCOM
4752:from the original on January 10, 2016
4721:from the original on October 24, 2007
4659:from the original on November 4, 2007
4551:from the original on January 10, 2016
4443:from the original on October 24, 2007
4433:"Astronauts marvel at Hurricane Dean"
4412:from the original on October 20, 2008
4358:from the original on December 8, 2007
4300:from the original on December 5, 2022
4273:from the original on December 9, 2007
4246:from the original on November 2, 2012
4192:from the original on January 10, 2016
4161:from the original on December 6, 2007
4047:"NASA studies shuttle repair options"
4026:from the original on October 24, 2007
3999:from the original on October 20, 2008
3945:from the original on October 24, 2007
3891:from the original on October 24, 2007
3833:from the original on October 24, 2007
3806:from the original on October 24, 2007
3698:from the original on October 19, 2007
3671:from the original on October 24, 2007
3613:from the original on December 9, 2007
3525:from the original on December 9, 2007
3390:from the original on December 8, 2007
3163:from the original on October 29, 2007
3137:from the original on December 5, 2018
3050:from the original on December 1, 2007
2149:were performed, in order to distance
1467:terminal countdown demonstration test
1321:Station-Shuttle Power Transfer System
906:
682:
7:
5365:International Space Station Insignia
4709:Harwood, William (August 21, 2007).
4690:from the original on August 23, 2007
4543:Associated Press (August 19, 2007).
4497:from the original on August 14, 2007
4462:Blatchford, Andy (August 19, 2007).
4099:. AP /Discovery News. Archived from
4076:from the original on August 25, 2007
4018:Harwood, William (August 15, 2007).
3964:Montalbano, Joel (August 16, 2007).
3937:Harwood, William (August 15, 2007).
3879:Harwood, William (August 14, 2007).
3860:from the original on August 23, 2007
3825:Harwood, William (August 14, 2007).
3800:"New gyro installed; spacewalk ends"
3798:Harwood, William (August 14, 2007).
3719:"STS-118 Flight day 5 Status Report"
3692:"STS-118 Flight Day 3 Status Report"
3659:Harwood, William (August 11, 2007).
3556:from the original on August 15, 2007
3490:Halvorson, Todd (January 25, 2007).
3444:from the original on August 25, 2007
3417:from the original on October 2, 2007
3189:from the original on August 12, 2007
2020:by the crew early Thursday morning.
1355:STS-118 included mission specialist
876:, the teacher who was killed aboard
4155:"STS-118 Mission Status Report #17"
4068:Malakoff, David (August 17, 2007).
3544:Harwood, William (August 3, 2007).
3007:"STS-118 Mission Status Report #27"
1762:s payload bay, and moved it to the
1454:on July 2, 2007. On July 10, 2007,
630:The mission is also referred to as
191:100,878 kilograms (222,398 lb)
183:121,823 kilograms (268,574 lb)
8040:Spacecraft which reentered in 2007
5373:International Space Station Emblem
4839:from the original on March 3, 2016
4812:from the original on June 20, 2010
4740:Chang, Kenneth (August 21, 2007).
4180:Chang, Kenneth (August 17, 2007).
3966:"Mission Status Briefing Graphics"
3773:"Mission Status Briefing Graphics"
3309:from the original on July 15, 2014
3215:. February 1, 2004. Archived from
2986:from websites or documents of the
2060:Saturday August 18 (Flight day 11)
1882:Wednesday August 15 (Flight day 8)
1106:5,480 kilograms (12,080 lb)?
14:
4896:NASAspaceflight.com STS 118 forum
4779:from the original on May 23, 2009
4211:Shannon, John (August 17, 2007).
3498:from the original on June 6, 2011
3209:"NASA Educator Astronaut Program"
3129:Bergin, Chris (August 21, 2007).
3110:from the original on July 3, 2010
3102:Gebhardt, Chris (June 29, 2010).
2967:Lists of spacewalks and moonwalks
2877:was the designation given to the
1937:Thursday August 16 (Flight day 9)
1651:Saturday August 11 (Flight day 4)
1340:system, which replaces the three
1213:Seats 1–4 are on the flight deck.
1183:14,036 kilograms (30,944 lb)
1084:1,800 kilograms (4,000 lb)?
586:(KSC), Florida and landed at the
5088:
4831:Bergin, Chris (April 15, 2007).
4771:Malik, Tariq (August 22, 2007).
4678:Klotz, Irene (August 21, 2007).
4516:Dunn, Marcia (August 18, 2007).
4466:. CanadaEast Telegraph-Journal.
4319:Klotz, Irene (August 17, 2007).
4238:Dunn, Marcia (August 17, 2007).
4122:Klotz, Irene (August 17, 2007).
4045:Dunn, Marcia (August 14, 2007).
2982: This article incorporates
2977:
2931:
2879:Contingency Shuttle Crew Support
2209:landing at Kennedy Space Center.
2181:Monday August 20 (Flight day 13)
2122:Sunday August 19 (Flight day 12)
2035:Friday August 17 (Flight day 10)
1821:Tuesday August 14 (Flight day 7)
1559:Thursday August 9 (Flight day 2)
1207:
1143:3,400 kilograms (7,500 lb)
1130:1,584 kilograms (3,492 lb)
812:
793:
770:
751:
730:
711:
692:
605:which culminated in the loss of
6141:† - mission failed to reach ISS
4599:"STS-118 Landing Ground Tracks"
3910:Boehm, Paul (August 15, 2007).
3301:Malik, Tariq (August 3, 2007).
2726:Black Horse and the Cherry Tree
2261:during post-landing inspection.
1746:Monday August 13 (Flight day 6)
1706:Sunday August 12 (Flight day 5)
1616:tiles that were damaged in the
1571:Friday August 10 (Flight day 3)
1215:Seats 5–7 are on the mid-deck.
4798:Fries, Colin (June 25, 2007).
2962:List of Space Shuttle missions
2002:NASA's Langley Research Center
98:
1:
2257:Damaged tile in the belly of
2023:The final item discussed was
1156:450 kilograms (990 lb)?
593:This was the first flight of
6135:Ongoing spaceflights are in
4800:"Chronology of Wakeup Calls"
1890:Mastracchio's damaged glove.
1389:150th crewed US space launch
1170:390 kilograms (860 lb)
1095:112 kilograms (247 lb)
1036:, (ESP-3) and a replacement
784:Second and last spaceflight
613:disintegrated during reentry
394:226 kilometers (140 mi)
384:226 kilometers (140 mi)
8035:Spacecraft launched in 2007
7246:indicates failure missions.
6182:U.S. Space Shuttle missions
5169:International Space Station
4872:September 15, 2007, at the
4653:"NASA STS-118 Landing Blog"
4626:"STS-118 Status Report #26"
4406:"STS-118 Status Report #21"
4352:"STS-118 Status Report #19"
4267:"STS-118 Status Report #18"
3854:"STS-118 Status Report #13"
2642:Tracy's nieces and nephews
2481:Where My Heart Will Take Me
1661:International Space Station
1495:Countdown and launch notes:
1034:External Stowage Platform 3
990:Parazynski was assigned to
850:Mission Specialist Educator
663:Orbiter Processing Facility
590:at KSC on August 21, 2007.
572:(ISS) flown by the orbiter
570:International Space Station
46:Space Transportation System
8056:
6210:Approach and Landing Tests
4884:December 19, 2013, at the
3607:"STS-118 Status Report 03"
2952:List of human spaceflights
2305:
1663:during EVA 1 on August 11.
1443:arrives at launch pad 39A.
1392:119th Space Shuttle flight
1330:Pressurized Mating Adapter
1013:ESP-3 launch configuration
994:and Nowak was assigned to
8003:
7242:
6131:
5358:
5175:
5119:California Science Center
5086:
4906:Discovery Center of Idaho
4491:"LeRoy E. Cain Biography"
3382:NASA (December 2, 2005).
3159:. NASA. August 31, 2007.
2422:18 August 2007 19:19 UTC
2419:18 August 2007 14:17 UTC
2400:15 August 2007 20:05 UTC
2397:15 August 2007 14:37 UTC
2376:13 August 2007 22:00 UTC
2373:13 August 2007 15:32 UTC
2354:11 August 2007 22:45 UTC
2351:11 August 2007 16:28 UTC
2006:Jet Propulsion Laboratory
1998:NASA Ames Research Center
1599:UTC (16:04 EDT), and the
1592:Rendezvous Pitch Maneuver
1553:Remote Manipulator System
1452:Vehicle Assembly Building
1276:
1257:
1249:
1230:
1222:
1206:
1119:?0 kilograms (0 lb)
1116:Distribution Unit (SPDU)
1044:Logistics Single Module.
989:
980:
977:
964:
961:
952:
947:
938:
935:
926:
923:
914:
911:
810:
807:
791:
788:
768:
765:
749:
744:
728:
725:
709:
706:
690:
687:
496:
492:
422:
418:
349:
345:
322:August 21, 2007, 16:33:20
309:
305:
266:
262:
199:
195:
152:
148:
52:
26:
4879:STS-118 Video Highlights
4651:NASA (August 21, 2007).
4624:NASA (August 21, 2007).
4597:NASA (August 20, 2007).
4404:NASA (August 19, 2007).
4377:NASA (August 18, 2007).
4350:NASA (August 18, 2007).
4265:NASA (August 17, 2007).
4153:NASA (August 17, 2007).
3991:NASA (August 16, 2007).
3852:NASA (August 14, 2007).
3632:NASA (August 31, 2000).
3332:. Boeing. Archived from
2648:, for her 38th birthday
2519:Electric Light Orchestra
2308:Extra-vehicular activity
2302:Extra-vehicular activity
2171:White Sands Space Harbor
2074:Patty Hilliard Robertson
1614:reinforced carbon-carbon
1038:Control Moment Gyroscope
862:Teacher in Space Project
588:Shuttle Landing Facility
279:August 8, 2007, 22:36:42
5994:Boeing Crew Flight Test
4867:NASA Space Shuttle News
4862:STS-118 mission summary
4242:. AP /Washington Post.
3605:NASA (August 9, 2007).
3239:"STS-118 Mission Patch"
3133:. NasaSpaceFlight.com.
3106:. NasaSpaceFlight.com.
2279:William H. Gerstenmaier
2147:Reaction Control System
1643:The crew activated the
1465:The crew completed the
1342:Tactical Air Navigation
1076:Orbiter Docking System
864:, which ended with the
852:due to the presence of
340:SLF Runway 15
36:rendezvous with the ISS
8030:Space Shuttle missions
5374:
5366:
4292:AP (August 16, 2007).
3636:. NASA. Archived from
3517:NASA (July 26, 2007).
3328:Boeing (May 3, 2007).
2984:public domain material
2921:
2920:in the mission STS-118
2299:
2274:well during re-entry.
2262:
2210:
2175:Edwards Air Force Base
2135:
2107:
2081:
1933:
1891:
1838:
1829:Backdropped by Earth,
1755:
1715:
1664:
1580:
1487:
1444:
1383:
1323:(SSPTS). SSPTS allows
1293:
1022:
1014:
841:. His replacement was
464:August 19, 2007, 11:56
452:August 10, 2007, 18:02
326:2007-08-21UTC16:33:21Z
283:2007-08-08UTC22:36:42Z
5372:
5364:
3494:. Florida Today.com.
3185:. NASA. May 3, 2007.
3083:on September 27, 2007
2908:
2820:Long John Baldry Trio
2666:"Good Morning World"
2637:Happy Birthday to You
2256:
2234:Radar acquisition of
2205:
2129:
2105:
2092:after the spacewalk.
2067:
1923:
1889:
1828:
1753:
1713:
1658:
1578:
1525:Solid Rocket Boosters
1485:
1438:
1291:
1191:Crew seat assignments
1050:Department of Defense
1020:
1012:
978:Mission Specialist 4
962:Mission Specialist 3
936:Mission Specialist 1
808:Mission Specialist 5
789:Mission Specialist 4
766:Mission Specialist 3
726:Mission Specialist 1
539:Space Shuttle program
359:Reference system
157:Spacecraft properties
7294:Orbital launches in
6065:List of ISS visitors
5183:Uncrewed ISS flights
4578:on December 20, 2007
4520:. Associated Press.
4331:on February 28, 2023
4103:on September 4, 2007
3409:NASA (May 1, 2007).
3219:on February 27, 2004
2918:Kennedy Space Center
2669:Adam, Barbara's son
2403:5 hours, 28 minutes
2379:6 hours, 28 minutes
2357:6 hours, 17 minutes
2248:Christopher Ferguson
1876:Neutral Buoyancy Lab
1871:Ames Research Center
1733:Johnson Space Center
1385:The mission marked:
1312:. STS-118 served as
948:Mission Specialist 2
745:Mission Specialist 2
584:Kennedy Space Center
4835:. NASASpaceflight.
4296:. MyPlainView.com.
3993:"Status Report #15"
3038:"STS-118 Press Kit"
2947:2007 in spaceflight
2870:Contingency mission
2848:Simon and Garfunkel
2788:"Teacher, Teacher"
2425:5 hours, 2 minutes
1460:crawler-transporter
1431:Launch preparations
973:Second spaceflight
940:Scott E. Parazynski
931:Second spaceflight
919:Second spaceflight
898:
761:Second spaceflight
758:Richard Mastracchio
721:Second spaceflight
702:Second spaceflight
674:
651:Michael D. Leinbach
239:Richard Mastracchio
23:
6047:Boeing Starliner-1
5375:
5367:
5165:Human spaceflights
4746:The New York Times
4431:Harwood, William.
4186:The New York Times
4049:. Associated Press
3829:. CBS Space News.
3802:. CBS Space News.
3582:. August 7, 2007.
3036:NASA (July 2007).
2939:Spaceflight portal
2922:
2556:Charles O. Hobaugh
2263:
2211:
2136:
2108:
2082:
1934:
1892:
1839:
1756:
1716:
1665:
1581:
1488:
1486:Launch of STS-118.
1445:
1418:First flight with
1294:
1284:Mission background
1023:
1015:
985:First spaceflight
957:First spaceflight
943:Fifth spaceflight
928:Charles O. Hobaugh
897:
885:Michael D. Griffin
882:NASA Administrator
822:First spaceflight
740:First spaceflight
718:Charles O. Hobaugh
673:
625:its heavier weight
354:Orbital parameters
229:Charles O. Hobaugh
133:Distance travelled
8015:
8014:
7253:
7252:
7086:
7085:
6148:
6147:
5131:
5130:
4547:. AP / NBC News.
4489:NASA (May 2007).
3336:on March 18, 2007
2906:
2864:
2863:
2844:"Homeward Bound"
2436:
2435:
2416:Clayton Anderson
2390:Rick Mastracchio
2368:Rick Mastracchio
1361:Christa McAuliffe
1332:-2 (PMA2) during
1281:
1280:
1188:
1187:
1127:Truss Segment S5
1054:MISSE PEC-3 and 4
1002:
1001:
874:Christa McAuliffe
826:
825:
803:Only spaceflight
559:
558:
443:(Destiny forward)
8047:
7948:Globus-1M No.11L
7299:
7298:
7297:
7280:
7273:
7266:
7257:
6197:
6175:
6168:
6161:
6152:
6101:Boeing Starliner
5158:
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5144:
5135:
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4390:
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4368:
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4347:
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4340:
4338:
4336:
4327:. Archived from
4316:
4310:
4309:
4307:
4305:
4289:
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4280:
4278:
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3705:
3703:
3687:
3681:
3680:
3678:
3676:
3656:
3650:
3649:
3647:
3645:
3640:on July 15, 2009
3629:
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2999:
2981:
2980:
2941:
2936:
2935:
2934:
2907:
2841:
2813:
2785:
2753:
2721:
2705:Rick Mastracchio
2694:Times Like These
2689:
2663:
2632:
2604:
2572:
2540:
2508:
2492:Rick Mastracchio
2476:
2454:
2393:Clayton Anderson
2343:Rick Mastracchio
2312:
1796:
1785:
1784:
1783:
1669:Rick Mastracchio
1667:At 21:45 (UTC),
1546:Zaragoza Airport
1426:Mission timeline
1381:
1211:
1195:
1081:3010 / EMU 3017
1059:
1005:Mission payloads
950:Flight Engineer
899:
835:Clayton Anderson
817:
816:
798:
797:
775:
774:
756:
755:
747:Flight Engineer
735:
734:
716:
715:
697:
696:
675:
659:Return to Flight
508:(left to right)
506:
501:
487:
483:
479:
467:
455:
444:
380:Perigee altitude
329:
327:
286:
284:
271:Start of mission
169:
141:Orbits completed
127:
123:
119:
115:
109:Mission duration
100:
91:
90:
84:
31:
24:
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6809:
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6144:
6127:
6076:
6053:
6007:
5845:
5713:
5547:
5376:
5356:
5185:
5179:ISS expeditions
5171:
5162:
5132:
5127:
5107:
5093:
5084:
4948:
4939:
4886:Wayback Machine
4874:Wayback Machine
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3792:
3782:
3780:
3771:Shannon, John.
3770:
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3765:
3755:
3753:
3744:Shannon, John.
3743:
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3550:Spaceflight Now
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3408:
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3363:on July 3, 2012
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2200:
2183:
2124:
2062:
2037:
1982:Shane Kimbrough
1939:
1884:
1823:
1794:
1782:
1779:
1778:
1777:
1775:
1748:
1708:
1684:Flight Director
1653:
1640:during launch.
1573:
1561:
1480:
1433:
1428:
1398:20th flight of
1382:
1379:
1286:
1214:
1212:
1193:
1115:
1092:Tunnel Adapter
1077:
1007:
984:
972:
966:Dafydd Williams
956:
949:
942:
930:
918:
831:
821:
811:
802:
792:
783:
777:Dafydd Williams
769:
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750:
746:
739:
729:
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710:
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691:
671:
568:mission to the
555:
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548:
541:
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485:
481:
477:
465:
453:
442:
441:
390:Apogee altitude
325:
323:
282:
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244:Dafydd Williams
165:
125:
121:
117:
113:
85:
80:
37:
17:
12:
11:
5:
8053:
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8013:
8012:
8008:Crewed flights
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7581:Zheda PiXing 1
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7388:IGS Optical 3V
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6032:SpaceX Crew-10
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4950:
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4942:Space Shuttle
4940:
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4930:
4923:
4915:
4909:
4908:
4903:
4898:
4893:
4888:
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4857:
4856:External links
4854:
4851:
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3428:
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3374:
3347:
3320:
3290:
3268:
3256:
3241:. NASA. 2007.
3230:
3200:
3174:
3148:
3121:
3094:
3077:Space Newsfeed
3061:
3028:
2993:
2992:
2974:
2971:
2970:
2969:
2964:
2959:
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2949:
2943:
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2926:
2923:
2911:Space Shuttle
2909:Launch of the
2897:
2894:
2871:
2868:
2862:
2861:
2853:
2850:
2845:
2842:
2836:
2835:
2827:
2822:
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2814:
2808:
2807:
2799:
2797:Barbara Morgan
2794:
2789:
2786:
2780:
2779:
2771:
2766:
2761:
2754:
2748:
2747:
2739:
2737:Tracy Caldwell
2734:
2729:
2722:
2716:
2715:
2707:
2702:
2697:
2690:
2684:
2683:
2675:
2673:Barbara Morgan
2670:
2667:
2664:
2658:
2657:
2649:
2646:Tracy Caldwell
2643:
2640:
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2627:
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2502:
2494:
2489:
2487:Russell Watson
2484:
2477:
2471:
2470:
2467:
2464:
2461:
2458:
2445:Gemini program
2440:
2437:
2434:
2433:
2426:
2423:
2420:
2417:
2414:Dave Williams
2412:
2408:
2407:
2404:
2401:
2398:
2395:
2388:
2384:
2383:
2380:
2377:
2374:
2371:
2370:Dave Williams
2366:
2362:
2361:
2358:
2355:
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2349:
2340:
2336:
2335:
2332:
2329:
2326:
2319:
2316:
2306:Main article:
2303:
2300:
2199:
2196:
2182:
2179:
2134:during STS-118
2123:
2120:
2097:Chris Hadfield
2086:Hurricane Dean
2061:
2058:
2036:
2033:
2029:Gulf of Mexico
2025:Hurricane Dean
1938:
1935:
1907:Robert Curbeam
1883:
1880:
1822:
1819:
1780:
1747:
1744:
1707:
1704:
1652:
1649:
1618:Space Shuttle
1594:(RPM), so the
1572:
1569:
1560:
1557:
1538:
1537:
1531:
1528:
1522:
1519:
1512:
1509:
1505:
1502:
1479:
1476:
1439:Space Shuttle
1432:
1429:
1427:
1424:
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1422:
1416:
1409:
1402:
1396:
1393:
1390:
1380:Barbara Morgan
1377:
1357:Barbara Morgan
1302:Space Shuttle
1285:
1282:
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1145:
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1128:
1125:
1121:
1120:
1117:
1114:Shuttle Power
1112:
1108:
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1101:
1097:
1096:
1093:
1090:
1086:
1085:
1082:
1074:
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1006:
1003:
1000:
999:
987:
986:
982:Barbara Morgan
979:
975:
974:
963:
959:
958:
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945:
944:
937:
933:
932:
925:
921:
920:
916:Scott J. Kelly
913:
909:
908:
905:
866:Space Shuttle
854:Barbara Morgan
830:
827:
824:
823:
809:
805:
804:
800:Barbara Morgan
790:
786:
785:
767:
763:
762:
748:
742:
741:
737:Tracy Caldwell
727:
723:
722:
708:
704:
703:
689:
685:
684:
681:
670:
667:
580:launch pad 39A
557:
556:
549:
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537:
494:
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462:
461:Undocking date
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314:End of mission
311:
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293:
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267:
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249:Barbara Morgan
246:
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234:Tracy Caldwell
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7982:Progress M-62
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7853:Globalstar 70
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7849:Globalstar 78
7846:
7845:Globalstar 67
7842:
7841:Globalstar 66
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7711:
7709:
7706:
7704:
7703:Progress M-61
7701:
7700:
7698:
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7598:Globalstar 72
7595:
7594:Globalstar 71
7591:
7590:Globalstar 69
7587:
7586:Globalstar 65
7584:
7582:
7578:
7575:
7573:
7570:
7568:
7567:Progress M-60
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7495:SaudiComsat-7
7492:
7491:SaudiComsat-6
7488:
7487:SaudiComsat-5
7484:
7483:SaudiComsat-4
7480:
7479:SaudiComsat-3
7476:
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7335:Progress M-59
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7216:
7212:
7211:investigation
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6091:Space Shuttle
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6022:SpaceX Crew-9
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5981:SpaceX Crew-8
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5960:SpaceX Crew-7
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5950:SpaceX Crew-6
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5935:SpaceX Crew-5
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5925:SpaceX Crew-4
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5900:SpaceX Crew-3
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5890:SpaceX Crew-2
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5875:SpaceX Crew-1
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5865:SpaceX Demo-2
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5753:Soyuz TMA-20M
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2607:"Outa-Space"
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2439:Wake-up calls
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2283:
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2255:
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2249:
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2204:
2197:
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2188:
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2178:
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2158:
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2119:
2116:
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2100:
2098:
2093:
2091:
2087:
2079:
2075:
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2070:Expedition 15
2066:
2059:
2057:
2053:
2049:
2045:
2043:
2034:
2032:
2030:
2026:
2021:
2017:
2013:
2011:
2007:
2003:
1999:
1993:
1989:
1985:
1983:
1978:
1975:
1969:
1967:
1964:s commander,
1963:
1959:
1955:
1951:
1946:
1944:
1936:
1931:
1930:Expedition 15
1927:
1926:Clay Anderson
1922:
1918:
1914:
1912:
1908:
1903:
1900:
1896:
1888:
1881:
1879:
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1678:
1674:
1673:Dave Williams
1670:
1662:
1657:
1650:
1648:
1646:
1641:
1639:
1635:
1631:
1630:external tank
1627:
1623:
1621:
1615:
1612:leading-edge
1610:
1604:
1602:
1601:Expedition 15
1597:
1593:
1589:
1585:
1577:
1570:
1568:
1566:
1558:
1556:
1554:
1549:
1547:
1543:
1535:
1534:External Tank
1532:
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1526:
1523:
1520:
1517:
1513:
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1506:
1503:
1499:
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1388:
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1386:
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1372:
1369:
1367:
1362:
1358:
1353:
1351:
1350:glass cockpit
1347:
1343:
1339:
1335:
1331:
1326:
1322:
1317:
1315:
1311:
1307:
1305:
1299:
1290:
1283:
1273:
1272:
1268:
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1262:
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1254:
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1234:
1227:
1226:
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1218:
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1200:
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1190:
1184:
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1123:
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1080:
1075:
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1067:
1064:
1061:
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1057:
1055:
1051:
1045:
1043:
1039:
1035:
1031:
1028:
1019:
1011:
1004:
997:
993:
988:
983:
976:
971:
967:
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955:
946:
941:
934:
929:
922:
917:
910:
904:
901:
900:
895:
893:
890:Prior to the
888:
886:
883:
879:
875:
871:
869:
863:
859:
855:
851:
846:
844:
840:
836:
828:
820:
815:
806:
801:
796:
787:
782:
778:
773:
764:
759:
754:
743:
738:
733:
724:
719:
714:
705:
700:
695:
686:
680:
677:
676:
668:
666:
664:
660:
656:
652:
648:
644:
643:external tank
640:
635:
633:
628:
626:
622:
619:for STS-107.
618:
614:
610:
609:
604:
600:
596:
591:
589:
585:
581:
577:
576:
571:
567:
566:Space Shuttle
563:
553: →
552:
547:
544:←
540:
535:
531:
527:
523:
519:
515:
511:
505:
500:
495:
491:
475:
471:
463:
459:
451:
447:
440:
437:
433:
430:
427:Docking with
425:
421:
417:
413:
411:
407:
403:
401:
397:
393:
391:
387:
383:
381:
377:
374:
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364:
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186:
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167:Space Shuttle
164:
160:
155:
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147:
143:
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135:
131:
111:
107:
103:
101:
94:
89:
83:
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63:
59:
55:
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47:
44:
40:
35:
30:
25:
19:
8017:
8007:
7977:Rascom-QAF 1
7862:
7825:Soyuz TMA-11
7823:
7780:Foton-M No.3
7753:
7723:SpaceHab LSM
7713:
7712:
7682:Zhongxing 6B
7628:
7450:Soyuz TMA-10
7448:
7339:
7326:Lapan-TUBsat
7231:
7224:
7217:
7198:
7179:
7172:
6964:
6136:
5998:
5986:
5979:
5627:Soyuz TMA-22
5607:Soyuz TMA-21
5582:Soyuz TMA-19
5567:Soyuz TMA-18
5541:Soyuz TMA-17
5531:Soyuz TMA-16
5511:Soyuz TMA-14
5491:Soyuz TMA-13
5481:Soyuz TMA-12
5456:Soyuz TMA-11
5450:
5441:Soyuz TMA-10
5054:
4943:
4841:. Retrieved
4826:
4814:. Retrieved
4793:
4781:. Retrieved
4766:
4754:. Retrieved
4745:
4735:
4723:. Retrieved
4717:. CBS News.
4714:
4704:
4692:. Retrieved
4683:
4673:
4661:. Retrieved
4646:
4634:. Retrieved
4619:
4607:. Retrieved
4592:
4580:. Retrieved
4576:the original
4565:
4553:. Retrieved
4538:
4526:. Retrieved
4511:
4499:. Retrieved
4484:
4472:. Retrieved
4457:
4445:. Retrieved
4436:
4426:
4414:. Retrieved
4399:
4387:. Retrieved
4372:
4360:. Retrieved
4345:
4333:. Retrieved
4329:the original
4324:
4314:
4302:. Retrieved
4287:
4275:. Retrieved
4260:
4248:. Retrieved
4233:
4221:. Retrieved
4206:
4194:. Retrieved
4185:
4175:
4163:. Retrieved
4148:
4136:. Retrieved
4127:
4117:
4105:. Retrieved
4101:the original
4090:
4078:. Retrieved
4063:
4051:. Retrieved
4040:
4028:. Retrieved
4013:
4001:. Retrieved
3986:
3974:. Retrieved
3959:
3947:. Retrieved
3932:
3920:. Retrieved
3905:
3893:. Retrieved
3884:
3874:
3862:. Retrieved
3847:
3835:. Retrieved
3820:
3808:. Retrieved
3793:
3781:. Retrieved
3766:
3754:. Retrieved
3739:
3727:. Retrieved
3712:
3700:. Retrieved
3685:
3673:. Retrieved
3664:
3654:
3642:. Retrieved
3638:the original
3627:
3615:. Retrieved
3600:
3588:. Retrieved
3579:
3570:
3558:. Retrieved
3549:
3539:
3527:. Retrieved
3512:
3500:. Retrieved
3485:
3473:. Retrieved
3458:
3446:. Retrieved
3431:
3419:. Retrieved
3404:
3392:. Retrieved
3377:
3365:. Retrieved
3361:the original
3350:
3338:. Retrieved
3334:the original
3323:
3311:. Retrieved
3305:. Fox News.
3281:. Retrieved
3279:. Spacefacts
3271:
3249:November 26,
3247:. Retrieved
3233:
3221:. Retrieved
3217:the original
3203:
3191:. Retrieved
3177:
3167:September 2,
3165:. Retrieved
3151:
3139:. Retrieved
3124:
3112:. Retrieved
3097:
3085:. Retrieved
3081:the original
3076:
3052:. Retrieved
3031:
3021:November 26,
3019:. Retrieved
2997:
2976:
2912:
2882:
2873:
2865:
2852:entire crew
2764:Foo Fighters
2758:Learn to Fly
2700:Foo Fighters
2583:Shania Twain
2513:Mr. Blue Sky
2442:
2296:
2292:
2288:
2284:
2276:
2272:
2264:
2258:
2235:
2233:
2228:
2214:
2213:The crew of
2212:
2206:
2192:
2186:
2184:
2167:
2162:
2159:
2150:
2144:
2138:
2137:
2131:
2117:
2109:
2094:
2089:
2083:
2054:
2050:
2046:
2041:
2038:
2022:
2018:
2014:
1994:
1990:
1986:
1979:
1973:
1970:
1961:
1947:
1940:
1915:
1904:
1901:
1897:
1893:
1867:
1859:
1855:Boise, Idaho
1846:
1842:
1840:
1830:
1814:
1812:
1803:
1800:
1791:
1789:
1772:
1759:
1757:
1737:
1729:
1725:
1719:
1717:
1700:
1696:
1688:
1681:
1666:
1642:
1619:
1605:
1587:
1583:
1582:
1562:
1550:
1540:The primary
1539:
1515:
1494:
1493:
1489:
1472:
1464:
1455:
1447:
1446:
1440:
1412:
1405:
1399:
1384:
1374:
1365:
1354:
1345:
1324:
1318:
1313:
1309:
1303:
1297:
1295:
1250:Mastracchio
1182:
1177:
1103:Spacehab-SM
1046:
1024:
891:
889:
877:
867:
847:
832:
654:
646:
636:
631:
629:
620:
606:
594:
592:
573:
561:
560:
449:Docking date
435:Docking port
414:91.6 minutes
404:51.6 degrees
335:Landing site
319:Landing date
188:Landing mass
172:
60:ISS assembly
57:Mission type
33:
18:
7995:Kosmos 2436
7991:Kosmos 2435
7987:Kosmos 2434
7927:Star One C1
7888:Kosmos 2433
7884:Kosmos 2432
7880:Kosmos 2431
7858:Kosmos 2430
7815:Intelsat 11
7789:WorldView-1
7761:Kosmos 2429
7661:Kosmos 2428
7619:Kosmos 2427
7572:NigComSat-1
7461:Hai Yang 1B
7412:FalconSAT-3
7384:IGS Radar 2
7330:Pehuensat-1
6106:Crew Dragon
6058:Individuals
6037:Soyuz MS-27
6000:Soyuz MS-26
5988:Soyuz MS-25
5965:Soyuz MS-24
5945:Soyuz MS-23
5930:Soyuz MS-22
5915:Soyuz MS-21
5905:Soyuz MS-20
5895:Soyuz MS-19
5885:Soyuz MS-18
5870:Soyuz MS-17
5860:Soyuz MS-16
5829:Soyuz MS-12
5803:Soyuz MS-08
5778:Soyuz MS-04
5426:Soyuz TMA-9
5411:Soyuz TMA-8
5401:Soyuz TMA-7
5391:Soyuz TMA-6
5345:Soyuz TMA-4
5330:Soyuz TMA-2
5315:Soyuz TMA-1
5300:Soyuz TM-34
5280:Soyuz TM-33
5265:Soyuz TM-32
5235:Soyuz TM-31
5123:Los Angeles
4528:October 30,
4304:December 5,
2732:KT Tunstall
2524:Scott Kelly
2466:Played for
2457:Flight Day
2224:Meteorology
2220:hypotension
2155:robotic arm
1966:Dick Scobee
1962:Challenger'
1565:heat shield
699:Scott Kelly
639:heat shield
510:Mastracchio
473:Time docked
400:Inclination
292:Launch site
276:Launch date
224:Scott Kelly
180:Launch mass
124:minutes, 34
8024:Categories
7973:Horizons-2
7963:Radarsat-2
7904:SAR-Lupe 3
7729:Spaceway-3
7687:DirecTV-10
7677:SAR-Lupe 2
7656:Genesis II
7646:TerraSAR-X
7515:AeroCube 2
7511:Libertad 1
7475:Saudisat-3
7471:EgyptSat 1
7466:Compass-M1
7318:Cartosat-2
7233:Enterprise
7181:Challenger
5850:Since 2020
5177:See also:
5112:On display
4843:August 21,
4816:August 13,
4783:August 22,
4756:August 22,
4725:August 21,
4694:August 21,
4663:August 21,
4636:August 21,
4609:August 20,
4582:August 20,
4555:August 19,
4501:August 18,
4474:August 19,
4447:August 19,
4416:August 19,
4389:August 18,
4362:August 18,
4335:August 17,
4277:August 17,
4250:August 17,
4223:August 17,
4196:August 17,
4165:August 17,
4138:August 17,
4107:August 17,
4080:August 17,
4030:August 15,
4003:August 16,
3976:August 16,
3949:August 15,
3922:August 16,
3895:August 14,
3864:August 15,
3837:August 14,
3810:August 14,
3783:August 14,
3756:August 12,
3729:August 13,
3702:August 11,
3675:August 11,
3644:August 13,
3617:August 13,
3590:August 29,
3529:August 13,
3502:August 13,
3475:August 13,
3448:August 13,
3421:August 13,
3394:August 13,
3367:August 13,
3340:August 13,
3313:August 24,
3193:August 13,
3141:August 22,
3054:August 22,
2973:References
2792:38 Special
2616:Alvin Drew
2551:John Mayer
2112:LeRoy Cain
2042:Endeavour'
1954:Alexandria
1924:Astronaut
1847:Endeavour'
1831:Endeavour'
1760:Endeavour'
1548:in Spain.
1406:Challenger
1404:94th Post-
1366:Challenger
1314:Endeavour'
1135:Bay 11–12
954:Lisa Nowak
912:Commander
907:Astronaut
878:Challenger
868:Challenger
843:Alvin Drew
833:Astronaut
829:Crew notes
819:Alvin Drew
688:Commander
683:Astronaut
363:Geocentric
254:Alvin Drew
162:Spacecraft
7923:Skynet 5B
7875:Chang'e 1
7749:INSAT-4CR
7742:September
7603:Sinosat-3
7562:Galaxy 17
7429:Skynet 5A
7416:MidSTAR-1
7358:Beidou-1D
7226:Endeavour
7219:Discovery
7092:Cancelled
6189:Completed
6137:underline
5718:2015–2019
5552:2010–2014
5381:2005–2009
5190:1998–2004
4944:Endeavour
3560:August 3,
3283:April 25,
3277:"STS-118"
2913:Endeavour
2884:Endeavour
2816:"Flying"
2449:Apollo 15
2331:Duration
2259:Endeavour
2236:Endeavour
2229:Endeavour
2215:Endeavour
2207:Endeavour
2187:Endeavour
2163:Endeavour
2151:Endeavour
2139:Endeavour
2132:Endeavour
2090:Endeavour
1974:Endeavour
1843:Endeavour
1792:Endeavour
1720:Endeavour
1588:Endeavour
1584:Endeavour
1544:site was
1516:Endeavour
1456:Endeavour
1448:Endeavour
1441:Endeavour
1411:6th Post-
1400:Endeavour
1346:Endeavour
1325:Endeavour
1310:Endeavour
1269:Caldwell
1258:Williams
1239:Caldwell
1124:Bay 8–10
1062:Location
1027:starboard
655:Endeavour
632:ISS-13A.1
595:Endeavour
575:Endeavour
484:hours, 54
373:Low Earth
338:Kennedy,
330: UTC
287: UTC
209:Crew size
173:Endeavour
120:hours, 55
82:2007-035A
76:COSPAR ID
34:Endeavour
7941:December
7932:Sirius 4
7918:Yaogan 3
7897:November
7819:Optus D2
7794:CBERS-2B
7755:JCSAT-11
7635:ITS S3/4
7577:Yaogan 2
7558:Astra 1L
7433:INSAT-4B
7424:STPSat-1
7379:THEMIS E
7375:THEMIS D
7371:THEMIS C
7367:THEMIS B
7363:THEMIS A
7351:February
7206:disaster
7200:Columbia
7187:disaster
7174:Atlantis
7165:Orbiters
7135:STS-61-J
7130:STS-61-M
7125:STS-62-A
7120:STS-61-H
7115:STS-61-G
7110:STS-61-F
7105:STS-61-E
7100:STS-41-F
6376:STS-51-L
6371:STS-61-C
6361:STS-61-B
6356:STS-61-A
6351:STS-51-J
6346:STS-51-I
6341:STS-51-F
6336:STS-51-G
6331:STS-51-B
6326:STS-51-D
6321:STS-51-C
6311:STS-51-A
6306:STS-41-G
6301:STS-41-D
6296:STS-41-C
6291:STS-41-B
6097:Present
6081:Vehicles
4947:(OV-105)
4882:Archived
4870:Archived
4837:Archived
4807:Archived
4805:. NASA.
4777:Archived
4750:Archived
4719:Archived
4688:Archived
4657:Archived
4655:. NASA.
4630:Archived
4628:. NASA.
4603:Archived
4601:. NASA.
4549:Archived
4522:Archived
4495:Archived
4493:. NASA.
4468:Archived
4441:Archived
4437:CBS News
4410:Archived
4408:. NASA.
4383:Archived
4381:. NASA.
4356:Archived
4354:. NASA.
4298:Archived
4271:Archived
4269:. NASA.
4244:Archived
4217:Archived
4215:. NASA.
4190:Archived
4159:Archived
4157:. NASA.
4132:Archived
4074:Archived
4024:Archived
3997:Archived
3995:. NASA.
3970:Archived
3968:. NASA.
3943:Archived
3916:Archived
3914:. NASA.
3889:Archived
3885:CBS News
3858:Archived
3856:. NASA.
3831:Archived
3804:Archived
3777:Archived
3775:. NASA.
3750:Archived
3748:. NASA.
3723:Archived
3721:. NASA.
3696:Archived
3694:. NASA.
3669:Archived
3665:CBS News
3611:Archived
3609:. NASA.
3584:Archived
3580:CBS News
3554:Archived
3523:Archived
3521:. NASA.
3496:Archived
3469:Archived
3467:. NASA.
3442:Archived
3440:. NASA.
3415:Archived
3413:. NASA.
3388:Archived
3386:. NASA.
3307:Archived
3243:Archived
3187:Archived
3161:Archived
3135:Archived
3108:Archived
3045:Archived
3043:. NASA.
3015:Archived
3005:(2007).
2925:See also
2334:Mission
2268:Astrovan
2238:through
2076:and the
1958:Virginia
1835:Canadarm
1815:Columbia
1764:Z1 truss
1677:S5 truss
1622:disaster
1620:Columbia
1413:Columbia
1378:—
1368:disaster
1306:disaster
1304:Columbia
1298:Columbia
1231:Hobaugh
1204:Landing
1100:Bay 5–7
1073:Bay 1–2
1042:Spacehab
1030:S5 truss
903:Position
892:Columbia
870:disaster
679:Position
647:Columbia
621:Columbia
611:when it
608:Columbia
530:Williams
526:Caldwell
480:days, 17
116:days, 17
65:Operator
7968:USA-199
7958:USA-198
7953:COSMO-2
7913:USA-197
7908:Rubin-7
7869:Harmony
7864:STS-120
7836:USA-196
7831:USA-195
7808:October
7733:BSAT-3a
7714:STS-118
7708:Phoenix
7651:USA-194
7630:STS-117
7624:COSMO-1
7456:Anik F3
7420:NEXTSat
7311:January
7150:STS-400
7145:STS-3xx
7140:STS-144
7076:STS-135
7071:STS-134
7066:STS-133
7056:STS-132
7051:STS-131
7046:STS-130
7025:STS-129
7020:STS-128
7015:STS-127
7010:STS-125
7005:STS-119
6995:STS-126
6990:STS-124
6985:STS-123
6980:STS-122
6970:STS-120
6965:STS-118
6960:STS-117
6950:STS-116
6945:STS-115
6940:STS-121
6930:STS-114
6919:STS-107
6909:STS-113
6904:STS-112
6899:STS-111
6894:STS-110
6889:STS-109
6879:STS-108
6874:STS-105
6869:STS-104
6864:STS-100
6859:STS-102
6834:STS-106
6829:STS-101
6803:STS-103
6192:(crews)
6117:Future
6042:Axiom-4
5975:Axiom-3
5955:Axiom-2
5920:Axiom-1
5743:TMA-19M
5738:TMA-18M
5733:TMA-17M
5707:TMA-15M
5702:TMA-14M
5697:TMA-13M
5682:TMA-11M
5677:TMA-10M
5672:TMA-09M
5657:TMA-07M
5652:TMA-06M
5647:TMA-05M
5632:TMA-03M
5622:STS-135
5612:STS-134
5602:STS-133
5587:TMA-01M
5572:STS-131
5562:STS-130
5536:STS-129
5521:STS-127
5506:STS-119
5496:STS-126
5486:STS-124
5471:STS-122
5461:STS-120
5446:STS-117
5431:STS-116
5416:STS-121
5396:STS-114
5320:STS-113
5305:STS-111
5295:STS-110
5285:STS-108
5270:STS-104
5220:STS-101
5167:to the
5104:Retired
5080:STS-134
5075:STS-130
5070:STS-127
5065:STS-126
5060:STS-123
5055:STS-118
5050:STS-113
5045:STS-111
5040:STS-108
5035:STS-100
4953:Flights
4684:Reuters
4325:Reuters
4128:Reuters
4072:. NPR.
4053:May 13,
4022:. CBS.
3941:. CBS.
3223:June 6,
3114:July 4,
3087:June 6,
2889:STS-120
2875:STS-322
2769:Al Drew
2545:Gravity
2463:Artist
2321:Start (
2078:STS-107
2008:, KSC,
1911:vectran
1768:STS-122
1740:STS-114
1692:STS-115
1638:orbiter
1415:mission
1408:mission
1334:STS-116
1266:Morgan
1242:Morgan
1201:Launch
1111:Bay 8P
996:STS-121
992:STS-120
839:STS-117
603:STS-107
599:STS-113
562:STS-118
551:STS-120
546:STS-117
518:Hobaugh
488:minutes
324: (
296:Kennedy
281: (
217:Members
128:seconds
97:SATCAT
22:STS-118
7766:Kaguya
7719:ITS S5
7696:August
7641:Ofek-7
7519:CSTB-1
7507:CAPE-1
7408:CFESat
7303:2008 →
7288:← 2006
7192:report
7155:Others
6854:STS-98
6844:STS-97
6839:STS-92
6824:STS-99
6798:STS-93
6793:STS-96
6783:STS-88
6778:STS-95
6773:STS-91
6768:STS-90
6763:STS-89
6753:STS-87
6748:STS-86
6743:STS-85
6738:STS-94
6733:STS-84
6728:STS-83
6723:STS-82
6718:STS-81
6708:STS-80
6703:STS-79
6698:STS-78
6693:STS-77
6688:STS-76
6683:STS-75
6678:STS-72
6668:STS-74
6663:STS-73
6658:STS-69
6653:STS-70
6648:STS-71
6643:STS-67
6638:STS-63
6628:STS-66
6623:STS-68
6618:STS-64
6613:STS-65
6608:STS-59
6603:STS-62
6598:STS-60
6588:STS-61
6583:STS-58
6578:STS-51
6573:STS-57
6568:STS-55
6563:STS-56
6558:STS-54
6548:STS-53
6543:STS-52
6538:STS-47
6533:STS-46
6528:STS-50
6523:STS-49
6518:STS-45
6513:STS-42
6503:STS-44
6498:STS-48
6493:STS-43
6488:STS-40
6483:STS-39
6478:STS-37
6468:STS-35
6463:STS-38
6458:STS-41
6453:STS-31
6448:STS-36
6443:STS-32
6422:STS-33
6417:STS-34
6412:STS-28
6407:STS-30
6402:STS-29
6392:STS-27
6387:STS-26
6012:Future
5592:TMA-20
5516:TMA-15
5250:STS-98
5240:STS-97
5210:STS-96
5200:STS-88
5098:Status
5030:STS-97
5025:STS-99
5020:STS-88
5015:STS-89
5010:STS-77
5005:STS-72
5000:STS-69
4995:STS-67
4990:STS-68
4985:STS-59
4980:STS-61
4975:STS-57
4970:STS-54
4965:STS-47
4960:STS-49
3717:NASA.
3690:NASA.
3463:NASA.
3436:NASA.
2840:Day 14
2812:Day 13
2784:Day 12
2752:Day 11
2469:Links
2411:EVA 4
2387:EVA 3
2365:EVA 2
2339:EVA 1
2245:CAPCOM
1609:silica
1223:Kelly
1178:Total:
1089:Bay 3
1065:Cargo
924:Pilot
707:Pilot
617:CAPCOM
597:since
564:was a
514:Morgan
486:
482:
478:
466:
454:
410:Period
369:Regime
300:LC-39A
126:
122:
118:
114:
7770:Okina
7537:NFIRE
7528:AGILE
7442:April
7404:ASTRO
7397:March
7341:NSS-8
7322:SRE-1
7062:2011
7042:2010
7036:2010s
7001:2009
6976:2008
6956:2007
6936:2006
6926:2005
6915:2003
6885:2002
6850:2001
6820:2000
6814:2000s
6789:1999
6759:1998
6714:1997
6674:1996
6634:1995
6594:1994
6554:1993
6509:1992
6474:1991
6439:1990
6433:1990s
6398:1989
6383:1988
6367:1986
6317:1985
6287:1984
6281:STS-9
6276:STS-8
6271:STS-7
6266:STS-6
6262:1983
6256:STS-5
6251:STS-4
6246:STS-3
6242:1982
6236:STS-2
6231:STS-1
6227:1981
6221:1980s
6206:1977
6200:1970s
6111:Soyuz
6087:Past
6028:2025
6018:2024
5971:2024
5941:2023
5911:2022
5881:2021
5856:2020
5839:MS-15
5834:MS-13
5825:2019
5819:MS-11
5813:MS-10
5808:MS-09
5799:2018
5793:MS-07
5788:MS-06
5783:MS-05
5774:2017
5768:MS-03
5763:MS-02
5758:MS-01
5749:2016
5724:2015
5688:2014
5663:2013
5638:2012
5598:2011
5558:2010
5502:2009
5467:2008
5437:2007
5407:2006
5387:2005
5350:TMA-5
5341:2004
5335:TMA-3
5326:2003
5291:2002
5246:2001
5216:2000
5206:1999
5196:1998
4810:(PDF)
4803:(PDF)
4715:SR-77
3048:(PDF)
3041:(PDF)
2916:from
2896:Media
2720:Day 9
2688:Day 9
2662:Day 8
2631:Day 7
2603:Day 6
2571:Day 5
2539:Day 4
2507:Day 3
2475:Day 2
2460:Song
2430:MISSE
2080:crew.
1863:Zarya
1795:'
1634:orbit
1420:SSPTS
1277:Drew
1198:Seat
1161:Sill
1148:Sill
1139:ESP-3
1068:Mass
1048:4, a
522:Kelly
439:PMA-2
170:
104:32008
42:Names
7799:Dawn
7784:YES2
7774:Ouna
7670:July
7612:June
7523:MAST
7503:CP-4
7499:CP-3
7296:2007
6121:Orel
6070:crew
4845:2007
4818:2007
4785:2007
4758:2007
4727:2007
4696:2007
4665:2007
4638:2007
4611:2007
4584:2007
4557:2007
4530:2008
4503:2007
4476:2007
4449:2007
4418:2007
4391:2007
4364:2007
4337:2007
4306:2022
4279:2007
4252:2007
4225:2007
4198:2007
4167:2007
4140:2007
4109:2007
4082:2007
4055:2023
4032:2007
4005:2007
3978:2007
3951:2007
3924:2007
3897:2007
3866:2007
3839:2007
3812:2007
3785:2007
3758:2007
3731:2007
3704:2007
3677:2007
3646:2007
3619:2007
3592:2009
3562:2007
3531:2007
3504:2007
3477:2007
3450:2007
3423:2007
3396:2007
3369:2007
3342:2007
3315:2007
3285:2024
3251:2007
3225:2014
3213:NASA
3195:2007
3169:2007
3143:2007
3116:2010
3089:2014
3056:2007
3023:2007
3003:NASA
2328:End
2315:EVA
2240:MILA
1841:The
1671:and
1501:fly.
1167:201
1152:OBSS
858:NASA
669:Crew
534:Drew
532:and
204:Crew
69:NASA
48:-118
7551:May
7542:AIM
7532:AAM
5577:132
5526:128
5476:123
5451:118
5421:115
5310:112
5275:105
5260:100
5255:102
5225:106
2859:mp3
2856:wav
2833:mp3
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2805:mp3
2802:wav
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2564:mp3
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