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STS-32
Mission insignia
STS-32 patch.png
Mission statistics
Mission name STS-32
Space shuttle Columbia
Launch pad 39-A
Launch date January 9, 1990, 7:35:00 a.m. EST
Landing January 20, 1990, 1:35:37 a.m. PST, Edwards Air Force Base
Mission duration 10/21:00:36
Number of orbits 172
Orbital altitude 178 nautical miles (330 km)
Orbital inclination 28.5 degrees
Distance traveled 4,509,972 miles (7,258,096 km)
Crew photo
STS-32 crew.jpg
Clockwise from top left: Ivins, Low, Dunbar, Wetherbee, Brandenstein.
Related missions
Previous mission Next mission
STS-33 STS-33 STS-36 STS-36

STS-32 is the 33rd launch of the Space Shuttle and the 9th launch of Space Shuttle Columbia. It marked the first time Pad A at Kennedy Space Center's Complex 39 was used for a launch since the 61-C mission on January 12, 1986. It was also the first use of Mobile Launcher Platform No. 3 (MLP-3) in the Space Shuttle program, and one of the longest Shuttle missions at 10 days. Before STS-32, the only mission of the same duration had been STS-9 in 1983, which was the first Spacelab mission and also on Columbia. STS-32 executed the third night landing of the program.

Contents

[edit] Crew

Position Astronaut
Commander Daniel C. Brandenstein
Third spaceflight
Pilot James D. Wetherbee
First spaceflight
Mission Specialist 1 Bonnie J. Dunbar
Second spaceflight
Mission Specialist 2 G. David Low
First spaceflight
Mission Specialist 3 Marsha S. Ivins
First spaceflight

[edit] Mission parameters

[edit] Facility preparations

Launch Complex 39A was modified extensively in preparation for the launch, with STS-32 the first launch from the refurbished pad since 61C in 1986. NASA made improvements to the crew emergency egress system and in the payload room, increased protection against freezing of the water services, installed debris traps used during propellant loading, and added more weather protection features and an umbilical to provide power, instrumentation and controls to the heaters for the solid rocket booster field joints.

Launch from pad 39A

MLP-3, the oldest of the three Apollo-era launch structures, also underwent extensive remodeling for use with the Shuttle. Those modifications included removal of the umbilical tower, reconfiguring for three exhaust holes, and changing the electrical and mechanical ground support systems.

[edit] Mission highlights

Syncom IV-F5 is deployed
The LDEF is retrieved

January 9, 1990, 7:35:00 a.m. EST. The launch was first scheduled for December 18, 1989, but was later postponed to complete and verify modifications to Pad A. The second scheduled launch on January 8, 1990 was aborted due to weather conditions. Launch Weight: 255,994 lb (116.117 Mg).

The objectives of the mission were to deploy the SYNCOM IV-F5 (also known as LEASAT 5) defense communications satellite and retrieve NASA's Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF), whose retrieval had been delayed for 4 1/2 years by scheduling changes and the Challenger disaster. The SYNCOM IV-F5 was deployed first on the second flight day, and a third stage Minuteman solid perigee kick motor propelled it into a geosynchronous orbit. Dunbar retrieved the LDEF on day four of the flight using the remote manipulator system. The timeliness of the retrieval had been of critical importance, because a high rate of solar flux had increased the density of the LDEF's orbital environment and accelerated its rate of orbital decay. Specialists who carefully monitored the stability of the craft's orbit had anticipated that if the LDEF was not retrieved in time, it would pass too low for the shuttle to safely reach, and it could be destroyed during re-entry in February 1990.

The crew performed a 4 1/2-hour photographic survey of the free-flying structure which held 57 science, technology and applications experiments. The 12-sided cylinder, about the size of a small bus, was then berthed in the orbiter's payload bay for return to Earth.

NASA had planned to acquire data on the crew members' exposure to long periods of zero gravity and its effects on the crew's performance while landing the orbiter after an extended mission. STS-32 set a new shuttle duration record of nearly eleven days. An orbiter kit was developed to allow the shuttle to operate up to 16 days in Earth orbit, and would later make its debut on Columbia's STS-50 mission in 1992.

The mission's exact liftoff time was determined about 12 hours before launch, using the latest tracking data on LDEF. It was flown on a 219 statute mile (352 km) orbit inclined 28.5 degrees to the equator.

The retrieval of LDEF was filmed with an IMAX camera, and appeared in the IMAX film Destiny in Space in 1994. Earth observation footage from the camera also appeared in the 1991 film Blue Planet.

Space Shuttle Columbia, returning to Kennedy Space Center (KSC) after the successful STS-32 mission, is poised atop the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft as the duo fly by the Vehicle Assembly Building at KSC.

The Shuttle landed on January 20, 1990 at 1:35:37 a.m. PST on Runway 22 of Edwards Air Force Base in California with a landing weight of 228,335 lb (103,571 kg). The roll-out distance was 10,731 feet (3,271 m) and roll-out time was 62 seconds. The orbiter returned to KSC on January 26, 1990.

[edit] Middeck payloads

  • Characterization of Neurospora Circadian Rhythms (CNCR)
  • Protein Crystal Growth (PCG)
  • Fluid Experiment Apparatus (FEA)
  • American Flight Echocardiograph (AFE)
  • Latitude / Longitude Locator (L3)
  • Mesoscale Lightning Experiment(MLE)
  • IMAX camera
  • Air Force Maui Optical Site (AMOS) experiment

[edit] Mission insignia

The three stars on the left and two stars on the right of the insignia symbolize the flight's numerical designation in the Space Transportation System's mission sequence.

[edit] Wake-up calls

A tradition for NASA human spaceflights since the days of Gemini, mission crews are played a special musical track at the start of each day in space. Each track is specially chosen, often by their families, and usually has a special meaning to an individual member of the crew, or is applicable to their daily activities. [1]

Flight Day Song Artist/Composer
Day 2
What’s More American? Bing Crosby
Day 3
The Banana Boat Song parody
Day 4
Let It Snow' parody'
Day 5
Hello Dolly parody
Day 6
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes
Day 7
Notre Dame Victory March
Day 8
Bow Down to Washington University of Washington
Day 9
Glory, Glory, Colorado University of Colorado
Day 10
Danny Boy Larry Bird
Day 11
Washington and Lee Washington and Lee University
Day 12
Born to Be Wild Steppenwolf
Day 13
Anchors Aweigh Charles A. Zimmerman

[edit] Gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Fries, Colin (June 25, 2007). "Chronology of Wakeup Calls" (PDF). NASA. http://history.nasa.gov/wakeup%20calls.pdf. Retrieved 2007-08-13. 

[edit] External links




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