Space Shuttle Atlantis Delivers Research Module to ISS
On its final mission, the crew of the space shuttle Atlantis successfully brought the Russian Mini-Research Module-1, also known as Rassvet (Russian for "dawn"), to its permanent home on the Russian segment of the International Space Station. NASA said Rassvet will provide additional storage space and a new docking port for Russian spacecraft. Mission specialists Garrett Reisman and Piers Sellers maneuvered the station robotic arm to deliver the module to its new position.
The crewmembers woke to the tune of The Village People's "Macho Man," the
featured song played for Reisman, the space agency noted. They connected the
module to the Earth-facing port of the Zarya module as the space station
orbited about 220 miles above Argentina
in the second of the mission's three scheduled spacewalks.
Weighing more than 11,000 pounds and measuring 19.7 feet in length and 7.7 feet
in diameter, Rassvet will host a wide variety of biotechnology and biological science
experiments and fluid physics and educational research.
"Rassvet provides important new real estate for experiments to be
conducted on the space station and will be a cornerstone of Russian laboratory
facilities for years to come," said Julie Robinson, ISS program scientist
at the Johnson Space
Center in Houston.
"This new module enhances the station's research capabilities and enables
new investigations to be performed."
On Monday, Atlantis astronauts completed a 7-hour, 25-minute spacewalk, installing
a second antenna for high-speed Ku band transmissions and adding a spare parts
platform to Dextre, a two-armed extension for the station's robotic arm. After
almost 25 years and more than 115 million miles, space shuttle Atlantis is down
to this final mission, while the space shuttle program is scheduled to be
mothballed after two more flights.
Atlantis mission STS-132 has now completed
one of its most critical tasks in delivering to the ISS the Rassvet module. It
is only the second Russian module to ever be carried into space by a space
shuttle, NASA noted. The orbiter was not only the first launched into space,
but it also was the first shuttle to dock to the Russian Space Station Mir.
Atlantis was the shuttle behind seven of the 11 shuttle missions to Mir.
"Atlantis has a history of being the shuttle that did the most international things," said Emily Nelson, lead space station flight director for the mission. "It's the orbiter that the Russians have known best because it's the one that came to their space station most often, and it's one that we used to deliver a module for them in the past."
Whether or not people recognize it by name, Atlantis' missions have often performed well-known services in the exploration of space. Besides the visits to Mir, Atlantis carried the Magellan Spacecraft into orbit, sending it on its way to Venus, where it mapped 98 percent of the planet from orbit. The same year-1989-it also deployed the Galileo spacecraft to Jupiter, where it collected data on the planet and its moons for eight years.
