
With shuttle Atlantis docked at the station, Reisman is at a point about 55 feet above the spacecraft as they sweep over Chile, Bolivia and Brazil before heading out over the Atlantic Ocean.
He and spacewalking partner Stephen Bowen will be mounting the boom and, a little later, a six-foot-wide dish to the Z1 truss, which juts up perpendicularly from the U.S. Unity module and the long axis of the station's 335-foot central truss.

The robot arm is being operated at a work station inside the station's Cupola, which features seven windows and provides a 360-degree panoramic view outside the outpost.
Shuttle pilot Tony Antonelli is directing the spacewalk from a perch inside the 400-ton complex.
6 comments:
Good Morning Todd. Not sure where to ask this because posts are so rapid right now during the space walk, but did I hear correctly that a segment of the SRBs from Friday's launch was also used on STS-1?
Hey Mark: That's correct. The segment beneath the forward dome on the RH SRB was used on STS-1, and the aft dome was flown on STS-51J, the maiden launch of Atlantis.
To be a bit clearer, the aft dome on the STS-132 LH SRB was used on 51J
Hi again Todd. Can you tell me which segments those are in this diagram? I think I know where the domes are but not positive. Thanks! http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/110687main_srb_diagram.gif
Mark: Check your e-mail....
Post a Comment