Posts Tagged ‘iconic’

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NASA publish first historic images of Endeavour docked at ISS

June 7, 2011

by yaska77

When Expedition 27 crew members Dmitry Kondratyev, Cady Coleman and Paolo Nespoli left the ISS aboard their Soyuz capsule, they paused briefly so ESA astronaut Nespoli could take the first ever images of a shuttle docked to the station from space.

NASA today has published some of the iconic and historic images he photographed.

Docked together 220 miles above the Earth, STS-134 Endeavour and the ISS (Click to enlarge) - Credit: NASA

Paolo Nespoli took the images from a departing Soyuz spacecraft on 23rd May 2011 (Click to enlarge) - Credit: NASA

The ISS moved 120° to give Nespoli the best view for the images (Click to enlarge) - Credit: NASA

NASA officials said these spacecraft “family portrait” images serve as a reminder of the contributions the shuttle program made to the construction of the International Space Station.  The 100 billion dollar station began assembly in 1998 with the Russian module Zarya, and then a certain orbiter called Endeavour (STS-88) took the first US built section (the Unity Module) into orbit the same year.

Fitting then that these images should feature the orbiter that helped start it all!  Striking photographs, and worth the wait!

The NASA gallery page features several more photographs, take a look here, they’re awesome!

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Watch Endeavour landing live! – NASA TV

May 31, 2011

by yaska77

The iconic space shuttle Endeavour (STS-134) is soon to begin her final approach for re-entry and landing, due for touchdown at Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 02:35 EDT (06:35 GMT/ 07:35 BST) Wednesday 1st June.  NASA TV will be following the landing so watch below or click here for the direct feed!

Free Videos by Ustream.TV

The de-orbit burn is scheduled for 01:29 EDT (05:29 GMT/ 06:29 BST) and footage will continue through landing and after. The post-landing news conference is usually around 2 hours after touchdown, and repeats will be screened throughout the morning.

As the penultimate shuttle landing ever this is an historic event.  The final shuttle mission (STS-135) is currently a go for launch on 8th July, and Atlantis is leaving the VAB (Vehicle Assembly Building) to travel to launchpad 39a this evening atop the massive “Crawler“.

Atlantis on top of "The Crawler" (STS-117) - Credit: NASA (Click to enlarge)

When decommissioned Endeavour will be placed in the California Science Center in Los Angeles on permanent display.

Endeavour facts:

  • Named after the ship commanded by British explorer James Cook from 1769 to 1771
  • Endeavour was the last orbiter built and flew its maiden voyage on 7th May 1992
  • Made the first American ISS construction flight, delivering the Unity Module
  • Carried out the mission to correct the Hubble Space Telescope’s flawed vision
  • Its radar map of the planet is one of the most used Earth-observation data-sets ever acquired
  • Total space time before its final mission: 280 days; Total Earth orbits: 4,429; Individual crew members: 133
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