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01/29/07: NASA Assigns Crew for STS-123, Space Shuttle Endeavour.

Dominic Gorie Gregory Johnson Richard Linnehan Robert Behnken Michael Foreman Takao Doi Leopold Eyharts Garrett Reisman

Mission: STS-123; 25th ISS Flight (1J/A); Shuttle flight No. 122
Launch Date: NET March 11, 2008, 02:28 EDT (06:28 UT)
Orbiter: Endeavour (OV-105)
Launch Pad: 39A map  weather
Launch video 3.86 MB, .wmv, credit: NASA
Landing: 20:39 EDT, March 26, 2008 (00:39 UT, March 27)
Landing Site: KSC map  weather
Deorbit to Kennedy on Orbit 249
Mission Elapsed Time: 15 dys, 18 hrs, 11 min, 3 secs
Main gear touchdown: 8:39:08 p.m. EDT
Nose gear touchdown: 8:39:17 p.m. EDT
Wheels stop: 8:40:41 p.m. EDT
Total miles: 6.6 million (10.6 x 106 km)
Landing video 1.4 MB, .wmv, credit: NASA TV
Inclination/Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles
Primary Payload: SLP-D1 with SPDM Dextre Robotics System, JEM ELM-PS, Kibo Logistics Module
Time Docked to ISS: 11 dys, 20 hrs, 36 min
Crew: Mission Commander: Michael Gorie, Pilot: Gregory Johnson, Mission Specialists: Richard Linnehan, Robert Behnken, Michael Foreman, Takao Doi (JAXA), launch: Garrett Reisman (ISS Expedition 16 Flight Engineer), landing: Leopold Eyharts (ISS Expedition 16 Flight Engineer, ESA, France).
Contingency Shuttle Crew Support Mission: STS-324 (Rescue STS-123) - Discovery (OV-103); launch: NET April 10.

NASA has assigned the crew for space shuttle mission STS-123. The flight will deliver both the first component of the Japanese Experiment Module Kibo and the new Canadian Dextre robotics system to the International Space Station.

Navy Capt. Dominic L. Gorie will command the Space Shuttle Endeavour on the STS-123 mission, targeted for launch in December 2007. Air Force Col. Gregory H. Johnson will serve as the pilot. Mission specialists will include NASA astronauts Richard M. Linnehan; Air Force Maj. Robert L. Behnken; and Navy Capt. Michael J. Foreman. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Takao Doi also will serve as a mission specialist. The mission will deliver a new station crew member to the complex and return another to Earth. Those individuals will be announced at a later date.


May 11, 2007: Attired in training versions of their shuttle launch and entry suits, the STS-123 crewmembers await the start of a training session in the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at Johnson Space Center. From the right are astronauts Dominic L. Gorie, commander; Gregory H. Johnson, pilot; Richard M. Linnehan, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's (JAXA) Takao Doi, Robert L. Behnken, all mission specialists; Garrett E. Reisman, Expedition 16 flight engineer; and Michael J. Foreman, mission specialist. Reisman is scheduled to join Expedition 16 as flight engineer after launching to the station on mission STS-123. Credit: NASA

Foreman had been assigned to the STS-120 shuttle mission but has been reassigned to STS-123. Astronaut Stephanie Wilson, who flew on last year's STS-121 mission, will replace Foreman as a mission specialist on STS-120, targeted for launch in September 2007.

STS-123 is the first in a series of flights that will launch components to complete the Kibo laboratory. The mission also will deliver the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre robotic system, a smaller manipulator equipped with two arms and designed to work with Canadarm2 to perform finer maintenance tasks that normally would be accomplished with spacewalks by astronauts on the International Space Station. The mission will include four spacewalks to install the new hardware.

STS-123 will be the fourth spaceflight for Gorie and Linnehan, the second spaceflight for Doi and the first spaceflight for Johnson, Behnken and Foreman.

Gorie flew as the pilot of STS-91 in 1998 and STS-99 in 2000. One year later, he commanded STS-108. He was born in Lake Charles, La., and graduated from Miami Palmetto High School, Miami, Fla. Gorie has a bachelor's from the Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., and a master's from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He was selected as an astronaut in 1994.

Johnson was selected as an astronaut in 1998. He was born in South Ruislip, Middlesex, United Kingdom, but graduated from Park Hills High School in Fairborn, Ohio. Johnson has a bachelor's from the Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colo., and master's degrees from Columbia University, New York, and from the University of Texas, Austin.

Linnehan flew on STS-78 in 1996 and STS-90 in 1998. During STS-109 in 2002, he performed three spacewalks to service the Hubble Space Telescope. Linnehan was born in Lowell, Mass. He has a bachelor's from the University of New Hampshire, Durham, N.H., and doctorate in veterinary medicine from Ohio State University, Columbus.

Selected as an astronaut in 2000, Behnken considers St. Ann, Mo., his hometown. He has a bachelor's from Washington University, St. Louis, and a master's and a doctorate from the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif.

Foreman considers Wadsworth, Ohio, his hometown and was selected as an astronaut in 1998. Foreman has a bachelor's from the Naval Academy and a master's from the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Calif.

Doi was born in Minamitama, Tokyo. He first flew on STS-87 in 1997, a mission during which he became the first Japanese astronaut to conduct a spacewalk. Doi has a bachelor's, a master's and a doctorate in aerospace engineering from the University of Tokyo. He also has a doctorate in astronomy from Rice University, Houston.

- courtesy of Katherine Trinidad, NASA Headquarters, Washington DC; Nicole Cloutier-Lemasters, Johnson Space Center, Houston, Tx.

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