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STS-107
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Video
1: KSC Center Director Message:

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Video
1: KSC Center
Director Message
Hello,
and welcome! I’m Roy Bridges, Kennedy Space Center Director. I’d
like to take a few minutes to tell you about STS-107, a 16-day
science mission packed with experiments and research to help us
learn more about ourselves, our bodies, our home planet and the
universe using the unique zero gravity environment of low earth
orbit.
Shuttle
Columbia’s primary payload is the SPACEHAB Research Double Module,
or RDM, which will make its debut on this mission. Most of the
STS-107 experiments will be located in the RDM and in Columbia’s
middeck. Also in the payload bay is the Fast Reaction Experiments
Enabling Science, Technology, Applications and Research, or FREESTAR.
Six experiments make up FREESTAR, including 11 research studies
from schools across the U.S.
The seven-member
crew of STS-107 will split into two alternating shifts in order
to maintain a 24-hour-a-day schedule on orbit. They will stay
busy with studies in the areas of astronaut health and safety,
advanced technology development and earth and space sciences.
The European Space Agency’s Advanced Respiratory Monitoring System
consists of seven experiments to look for changes in the heart,
lungs or metabolism. The Canadian Space Agency and German Space
Agency are also participating in studies, as are students from
schools in Australia, China, Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein and
the U.S.
As you
can see, some truly important work will take place during this
mission. Thank you for joining us!
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Photo
1: Space Shuttle Columbia Sits on the Pad
Space Shuttle Columbia, shown here on launch pad 39A, is nearing
final preparations for its 16-day flight. The mission is considered
an Extended Duration Orbiter mission, which is a term used to
describe a mission lasting longer than 13 days.
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Photo
1: Space Shuttle Columbia Sits on the Pad
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Photo
2: The STS-107 Crew in Pre-flight Training
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Photo
2: The STS-107 Crew in Pre-flight Training
The
STS-107 crew members are shown here in front of the SPACEHAB Double
Module as part of In-Flight Maintenance training. This will be
the first space flight of the SPACEHAB Double Module, which includes
a broad collection of experiments ranging from material science
to life science.
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Photo
3: Crew
Members Examining Flight Hardware
Shown here during Crew Equipment Interface Test activities, also
known as C-E-I-T, the STS-107 crew looks at flight equipment in
the Orbiter Processing Facility.
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Photo
3: Crew Members Examining Flight Hardware
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Photo
4: KSC Workers Prepare Columbia

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Photo
4: KSC Workers Prepare Columbia
KSC workers
are shown here in the Orbiter Processing Facility bay preparing
Columbia for the mission. STS-107 is a research mission, with
SPACEHAB as the primary payload, plus FREESTAR. FREESTAR stands
for Fast Reaction Experiments Enabling Science, Technology,
Applications and Research, and incorporates eight high priority
secondary shuttle experiments.
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Photo
5: STS-107
Mission Patch
The STS-107
Mission Patch is shown here. The central element of the patch
is the microgravity symbol flowing into the rays of the astronaut
symbol. The mission inclination is portrayed by the 39 degree
angle of the astronaut symbol to the Earth's horizon. The sunrise
is representative of the numerous experiments that are the dawn
of a new era for continued microgravity research on the International
Space Station and beyond. The breadth of science conducted on
this mission will have widespread benefits to life on Earth
and our continued exploration of space illustrated by the Earth
and stars. The constellation Columba (the dove) was chosen to
symbolize peace on Earth and the Space Shuttle Columbia. The
seven stars also represent the mission crew members and honor
the original astronauts who paved the way to make research in
space possible. The Israeli flag is adjacent to the name of
the payload specialist who is the first person from that country
to fly on the Space Shuttle.
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Photo
5: STS-107 Mission Patch
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Photo
6: STS-107 Formal Crew Photo
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Photo
6: STS-107 Formal Crew Photo
The STS-107 crew, seated in front, from left, are Mission Commander
Rick Husband and Pilot William McCool. Standing, from left, are
Mission Specialists David Brown, Laurel Clark, and Kalpana Chawla,
Payload Commander Michael Anderson, and Payload Specialist Ilan
Ramon—representing the Israeli Space Agency. The crew is divided
into two teams—red and blue. The teams will work 24 hours a day,
alternating shifts, to complete the many experiments.
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Photo
7: Rick Husband, Formal
Rick Husband, shown here, will serve as the STS-107 Mission Commander
on his second flight. He was selected as an astronaut candidate
by NASA in December 1994. Most recently, he served as Chief of
Safety for the Astronaut Office. Husband flew as pilot on STS-96
in 1999, the first ISS shuttle docking mission, and has logged
235 hours and 13 minutes in space. He will work with the
Red Team.
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Photo
7: Rick Husband, Formal
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Photo
8: Husband, Informal
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Photo
8: Husband, Informal
Husband
is shown here in pre-flight training at Crew Equipment Interface
Test activities at Spacehab. These CEIT activities enable the
crew to perform certain flight operations in a flight-like environment.
He received a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering
from Texas Tech University in 1980, and a master of science
in mechanical engineering from California State University-Fresno
in 1990. Commander Husband will now give a brief overview of
the STS-107 mission.
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Video 2:
Husband
The STS-107
mission will be a science research mission. We’ll be up for 16
days. We’ve got seven crewmembers and we will be working dual
shifts. So, we’ll be working around the clock, working on several
different types of experiments that will be in the Orbiter mid-deck,
back in the shuttle payload bay and also in the Spacehab Research
Double Module. This is the first flight of the Research Double
Module, and it’s been modified with a few extra components for
air conditioning and data and power to be able to power additional
experiments and get the data from the Spacehab to the Orbiter
and then to the ground. We’ll be working on several different
types of experiments while we’re up there doing some research
on different things that folks have planned for this particular
flight.
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Video
2: Husband

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Photo
9: William McCool, Formal
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Photo
9: William McCool, Formal
William
McCool, shown here, will serve as pilot. After completing two
years of training and evaluation, he is qualified for flight assignment
as a pilot. Initially assigned to the Computer Support Branch,
McCool also served as Technical Assistant to the Director of Flight
Crew Operations, and worked Shuttle cockpit upgrade issues for
the Astronaut Office. STS-107 is McCool’s first space flight.
He is part of the Blue Team.
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Photo
10: McCool, Informal
McCool is
shown here wearing a training version of the shuttle launch
and entry suit while participating in a mission training session.
He received a bachelor of science in applied science from the
U.S. Naval Academy in 1983, a master of science in computer
science from the University of Maryland in 1985 and a master
of science in aeronautical engineering from the U.S. Naval Postgraduate
School in 1992. He will now explain the challenges associated
with the mission.
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Photo
10: McCool, Informal

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Video
3: McCool

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Video 3:
McCool
I think
that the biggest concern I have about the long-duration mission
is not so much the duration but the density of the whole mission.
It’s very tightly choreographed and there are so many payloads.
Each one, in terms of time, has interdependencies on the other
one being done or partially being done. If there are any hiccups
or delays, it’s just going to ripple through the timeline. The
real test for the team on the ground and for us up on orbit will
be how to react and reprioritize to make the experiments go as
planned and achieve the objectives despite the hiccups.
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Photo
11: Michael Anderson, Formal
Michael
Anderson, shown here, will serve as payload commander. He was
selected by NASA in December 1994. Anderson was initially assigned
technical duties in the Flight Support Branch of the Astronaut
Office. After completing his first space flight, STS-89, he
has logged over 211 hours in space. He is also on the Blue Team.
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Photo
11: Michael Anderson, Formal
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Photo
12: Anderson, Informal

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Photo
12: Anderson, Informal
Anderson,
shown here, checks equipment during training at SPACEHAB. He
received a bachelor of science in physics/astronomy from the
University of Washington in 1981 and a master of science in
physics from Creighton University in 1990. Now, he shares his
thoughts on the variety of experiments.
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Video 4:
Anderson
When we
first started training for this flight and we got our first briefings
about the number of payloads and experiments that were going to
be on this flight, I was really amazed. I was impressed. It was
certainly evident that the scientific community had been waiting
a long time for this flight, and they’d saved up a number of really
good experiments. They’ve done an excellent job in patching all
these experiments and integrating them into the 16-day mission.
One of the hardest parts of preparing for this flight is really
trying to get a handle on the variety of payloads and experiments.
We’re just excited to be able to take them up there and, hopefully,
bring back some of the best science we’ve had in years.
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Video
4: Anderson

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Photo
13: Ilan Ramon, Formal
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Photo
13: Ilan Ramon, Formal
Representing
the Israeli Space Agency, Ilan Ramon will serve as payload specialist
on this, his first spaceflight. He will be working with the
Red Team.
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Photo
14: Ramon, Informal
Ramon, who
was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, is shown here in pre-flight training.
In 1974, he graduated as a fighter pilot from the Israel Air
Force Flight School, and received a bachelor of science in electronics
and computer engineering from the University of Tel Aviv in
1987. Now, he shares his thoughts on how the research benefits
of STS-107 are international.
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Photo
14: Ramon, Informal

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Video
5: Ramon

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Video 5:
Ramon
It’s a
global community. We are today more and more in the 21st century.
We are a global community, and when you get to science and especially
space science, that’s the best tool and way of living like a global
community. So, I think it is great to have this opportunity of
having experiments out of the whole world, first of all, as scientists
from out of the whole world, students out of the whole world.
Of course the benefits are going to be shared by the humans in
the world, and the whole science community in the world. So, I
think it’s a great opportunity to express our way of life today
in the 21st century.
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Video
5: Ramon
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Photo
15: David Brown, Formal
David
Brown, shown here, will serve as a mission specialist on STS-107,
which is his first flight. He was initially assigned to support
payload development for the International Space Station, and
then worked with the astronaut support team responsible for
orbiter cockpit setup, crew strap-in, and landing recovery.
He is a Blue Team member.
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Photo
15: David Brown, Formal
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Photo
16: Brown, Informal

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Photo
16: Brown, Informal
Brown is
shown here wearing a training version of the shuttle launch
and entry suit while participating in a mission training session.
He received a bachelor of science in biology from the College
of William and Mary in 1978 and a doctorate in medicine from
Eastern Virginia Medical School in 1982. Now he will explain
one of the ways this mission’s experiments are unique.
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Video
6: Brown
On this
flight, all of us are not only operators, but we’re experiment
subjects. We’re heavily involved in not only collecting the science,
but we kind of are the science for parts of it. But being an astronaut
is kind of a participatory event. If you put on a space suit and
go outside and assemble the Space Station, you’re pretty well
fully engaged and involved in that and you’re going to come back
with a few sore spots and bruises from that event. We’re doing
a little bit of different work here in that we’re having our blood
drawn. We’re sitting on an ergometer (a stationary bicycle) and
breathing while we’re being studied. So, it really doesn’t matter
what job you have as an astronaut. You just climb right into it,
and you’re right in the middle of it. As someone with a science
background, I’m a physician, I think it’s pretty darn neat. I
think it really feels like a great privilege to kind of jump in
and be right in the middle of it. Whatever I can do to contribute
to the science, to improve the science, I think is really great.
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Video
6: Brown

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Photo
17: Laurel Clark, Formal
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Photo
17: Laurel Clark, Formal
Selected
by NASA in April 1996, Laurel Clark, shown here, will also serve
as mission specialist. After completing two years of training
and evaluation, she was qualified for flight assignment as a
mission specialist. From July 1997 to August 2000, she worked
in the Astronaut Office Payloads/Habitability Branch. She is
part of the Red Team.
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Photo
18: Clark, Informal
Shown here
in pre-flight training, Dr. Clark will participate in her first
space flight on mission STS-107. She received a bachelor of
science in zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
in 1983 and a doctorate in medicine from the same school in
1987. She now explains why STS-107’s student experiments are
significant.
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Photo
18: Clark, Informal

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Video
7: Clark

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7: Clark
I
think that any time we interact with students, it's extremely
important. Not just our mission and not just NASA. There are any
number of people who volunteer helping our young people to further
their education. Let's face it, they're the future of our country;
the future of our world. They're the people that are going to
solve the problems that we don't solve today. I think we can help
them, to foster an interest in science and make them excited about
what they're doing. The really wonderful thing about NASA and
spaceflight is that it is exciting. At least, especially to outsiders,
it's exciting. A lot of what we do while being exciting is also
a lot of work and requires time and attention. Students who are
selected to fly experiments on the shuttle remember that for the
rest of their lives as something that they were able to participate
in and be involved in. I think that's extremely important.
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Photo
19: Kalpana Chawla, Formal
Mission
Specialist Kalpana Chawla, shown here, was selected by NASA in
December 1994. She was originally assigned as crew representative
to work technical issues for the Astronaut Office EVA/Robotics
and Computer Branches. Chawla was a mission specialist and prime
robotic arm operator on STS-87. During her first mission, she
traveled 6.5 million miles in 252 orbits of the Earth and logged
376 hours and 34 minutes in space. She is also working with the
Red Team.
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Photo
19: Kalpana Chawla, Formal
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20: Chawla, Informal
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20: Chawla, Informal
Shown here
during CEIT activities, Chawla looks at equipment inside the
SPACEHAB payload. She received a bachelor of science in aeronautical
engineering from Punjab Engineering College, India, in 1982,
a master of science in aerospace engineering from the University
of Texas in 1984 and a doctorate in aerospace engineering from
the University of Colorado in 1988. Dr. Chawla now discusses
the benefits of the alternating shift plan the crew will follow.
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Video 8:
Chawla
We are
a dual-shift mission because the extent of science, the experiments
we are carrying, is just very, very large. There is simply no
way to carry out that kind of science with just one shift. You
might say, if we have seven people on one shift, they could just
divvy up the experiments and, hence, you should be able to do
the same number of things. The issue is that on our orbiter, there
are lots of attitude requirements. The orbiter should be in a
certain attitude to do, for example, the ozone measurements, and
in a different attitude to do, for example, the dust measurements.
In a free-drift attitude, meaning that no jets should be firing
and it’s just drifting, hence the word free drift, to do some
of our very microgravity-sensitive experiments. For example, one
of the combustion module experiments needs a very quiescent environment.
So, because of these very extensive requirements on what sort
of attitude the orbiter should be in, and what kind of microgravity
environment is required, you sort of need to take advantage of
the whole day. It really helps to use the crew much more efficiently
by doing that.
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Video
8: Chawla

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Photo
21: Crew Members at TCDT
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21: Crew members at TCDT
The STS-107
Crew is shown here at Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test
activities. These pre-mission orientation activities provide
the crew with emergency egress training, opportunities to inspect
their mission payloads in Space Shuttle Endeavour's payload
bay, and include simulated countdown exercises .
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Photo
22: Columbia on Pad
Now, the
Space Shuttle Columbia is poised for launch on Pad 39A and her
seven-member crew is counting down their final hours before
launch.
We at Kennedy
Space Center thank you for joining us, and for sharing our enthusiasm
for this exciting research mission. STS-107 is not only a mission
of science and discovery, but the international payloads and
makeup of this crew also highlights the increasing cooperation
of nations working together to improve the lives of humans around
the globe.
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Photo
22: Columbia on Pad
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23: NASA Logo
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23: NASA Logo
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