Home 
   Home     Weather    RSS News Feed RSS
Bookmark and Share This site is under re-construction

Just Click: Sponsors Pay for Food.
Buy Space Memorabilia, Flight Suits, Toys, Games
MySpace

Subscribe by email or Skype, AOL, Windows Live, Yahoo Messenger, Twitter
Subscribe to Space and Astronautics News:
Enter your Email Address:
Privacy Policy: Your address is confidential, and will not be disclosed to third parties.

Local and International Weather Forecasts


Help keep Space and Astronautics News online.



SiteUptime Web Site Monitoring Service

Labelled with ICRA

Add to My NASA

04/07:10: STS-131: Discovery's Crew to wake at 7:21 CDT pm tonight.

STS-131

Mission: STS-131

Orbiter: Discovery

Launch Pad: 39A

Launch Date: NET April 5, 2010, 06:21 EDT (10:21 UT)

Landing: April 20, 2010, Kennedy Space Center

Main gear touchdown: 09:08:35 EDT

Nose gear touchdown: 09:08:47 EDT

Wheels stop: 09:09:33 EDT

Orbital Altitude: 122 nautical miles (140 miles)

Orbital Insertion: 191 nautical miles (220 miles)

Orbital Inclination: 51.6 degrees

Crew:- Commander: Alan Poindexter; Pilot: James Dutton; Mission Specialists:- MS1 Richard Mastracchio, MS2 Dorothy M. Metcalf-Lindenburger, MS3 Clayton Anderson, MS4 Stephanie Wilson, MS5 Naoko Yamazaki (JAXA).

Primary Payload: Multi-Purpose Logistics Module: Leonardo.

Map of Kennedy Space Center

Cape Canaveral weather forecast

How to watch NASA TV

11 a.m. CDT Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Mission Control Center, Houston, Texas
STS-131 Mission Control Center Status Report #05

This front-on, 800mm view of the top part of Discovery’s cabin was provided by one of the Expedition 23 crew members onboard the International Space Station. The shuttle was in the midst of a back-flip, performed to enable the station’s cameras to survey it for possible damage. The rendezvous and subsequent docking occurred early on April 7. Once the Discovery crew joins the Expedition 23 crew aboard the orbital complex, nine men and four women will begin several days of joint activities, including three spacewalks. Credit: NASA

Space shuttle Discovery and its seven-member crew took up temporary residence at the International Space Station with a smooth rendezvous and docking at 2:44 a.m. CDT Wednesday, April 7.

After procedural leak checks to ensure a solid mate between the two vehicles – which orbit the Earth with a combined mass of more than 1 million pounds – the hatches were opened at 4:11 a.m. and the joint crew of 13 began at least eight days of work.

Discovery’s crew includes Commander Alan G. Poindexter, Pilot James P. Dutton Jr. and Mission Specialists Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger, Rick Mastracchio, Stephanie Wilson, Clayton Anderson and Japanese astronaut Naoko Yamazaki.

Several “firsts” in the space business occurred with hatch opening: the first time four women have been aboard the same spacecraft during a mission and the first time two Japanese astronauts have been aboard the space station simultaneously – Yamazaki and fellow Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Soichi Noguchi serving as a member of the station’s Expedition 23 crew.

He is joined by station Commander Oleg Kotov and Flight Engineers Alexander Skvortsov, Mikhail Kornienko, T.J. Creamer and Tracy Caldwell Dyson.

Just before guiding Discovery to a docking 215 miles up, tracking north of Caracas, Venezuela, Poindexter commanded the shuttle through a nose-over-tail 360-degree maneuver so the outside thermal protection system could be documented by station crew members Kotov and Creamer using digital cameras with high-powered lenses.

Earlier the crew attempted once again to activate the shuttle’s Ku-Band Antenna System to no avail. The loss of the high-data rate television and radar capability was no issue for the rendezvous and docking activities. All shuttle crews train for just such a contingency.

All imagery gathered as Discovery approached the station along with that collected Monday and Tuesday will be downloaded to Mission Control for analysis via the station’s Ku-Band system to ensure the shuttle’s heat shield is safe for re-entry April 18.

The two crews head to bed about 11 this morning and will be awakened at 7:21 tonight.

The next shuttle status report will be issued following crew wakeup, or earlier if events warrant.

– courtesy of NASA

  • 04/19/10: Space Shuttle Discovery lands at Kennedy Space Center.
    STS-131 Commander Alan G. Poindexter guided Discovery to an 8:08 a.m. CDT landing at the Kennedy Space Center’s Shuttle Landing Facility in Florida. Weather had caused postponement of the first day’s landing attempts, and a rain shower within 30 miles of the runway brought a wave-off of the first of today’s opportunities. Showers moved off to permit landing on the second. - NASA
  • 04/19/10: STS-131 crew spends an extra day in orbit.
    Space shuttle Discovery’s crew is prepared to return home Tuesday, as mission managers closely monitor weather that could affect their entry and landing at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. - NASA
  • 04/19/10: Space Shuttle Discovery: today's landing waived off.
    Space shuttle Discovery will spend another day in orbit after two landing opportunities at Kennedy Space Center in Florida were foiled by clouds and rain in the area. Forecasts call for Florida conditions to improve Tuesday and for generally good weather in California. - NASA
  • 04/18/10: STS-131 crew prepares for landing.
    The astronauts onboard space shuttle Discovery are getting ready to conclude their successful mission to the International Space Station, weather permitting, with a planned landing at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida Monday at 7:48 a.m. CDT. - NASA
  • 04/18/10: Crew powers up Discovery’s flight control system; tests flaps and rudder.
    This morning, Poindexter, Dutton and Metcalf-Lindenburger powered up Discovery’s flight control system and tested the flaps and rudder that will control the shuttle’s flight once it enters the Earth’s atmosphere. Next they test-fired the reaction control system jets that will control the shuttle’s orientation before it reaches the atmosphere. All seven crew members stowed items in Discovery’s cabin in preparation for re-entry and landing. - NASA


Space and Astronautics News is completely opposed to the use of any animals in science experiments, including in space missions.

Copyright © Space and Astronautics News 1999 – 2010 All Rights Reserved.