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Space Shuttle Processing Status 26 Feb 2002

 
STATUS REPORT
Date Released: Tuesday, February 26, 2002
Source: Kennedy Space Center


MISSION: STS-109 - HST Servicing Mission 3B

VEHICLE: Columbia/OV-102
TARGET KSC LAUNCH DATE: Feb. 28, 2002 at 6:48 a.m.
TARGET KSC LANDING DATE: March 11, 2002 at 5:01 a.m.
MISSION DURATION: 11 days
CREW: Altman, Carey, Grunsfeld, Currie, Newman, Linnehan, Massimino
ORBITAL INSERTION ALTITUDE and INCLINATION: 308 nautical miles/28.5 degrees

Shuttle Processing Note: The Shuttle Columbia countdown ran a few hours late this morning due to requirements to perform additional inspections before closing the payload bay doors and changing out a faulty ground support equipment regulator before initiating fuel cell propellant load. Fuel cell servicing is scheduled to begin at about noon and will continue as the countdown enters a four-hour built-in-hold at the T-27 hour mark at 2 p.m. The Space Shuttle Mission Management Team meets at 2 p.m. to assess final status for the planned liftoff of STS-109 on Thursday, Feb. 28.

The seven STS-109 crewmembers, working their own circadian time cycle, were awakened at 9 p.m. Monday night and spent their "day" undergoing medical checks and performing final mission preparations. Commander Scott Altman and Pilot Duane Carey made a 1-¸ hour flight in the Shuttle Training Aircraft before returning to the crew quarters at 7 a.m. The crew had dinner at 9:45 a.m. and were scheduled to start their sleep period at 1 p.m.

The latest forecast for Thursday has a 40 percent probability of weather prohibiting launch, with scattered clouds at 3,000 feet, a temperature of 39 degrees F and surface winds from the northwest at 7 to 10 knots. The forecast for the Solid Rocket Booster recovery area calls for a sea state of eight to 10 feet, northwest winds 18-22 knots and an ocean temperature of 72 degrees F.

Launch-1 Day (Wednesday, Feb. 27)

Enter planned hold at T-11 hours for 12 hours, 58 minutes (2 a.m.)

*	Begin star tracker functional checks (3 a.m.)
*	Activate orbiter's inertial measurement units
*	Activate the orbiter's communications systems 
*	Install film in numerous cameras on the launch pad (4:50 a.m.)
*	Flight crew equipment late stow (7:20 a.m.)
*	Move Rotating Service Structure (RSS) to the park position (11 a.m.)
*	Perform ascent switch list
*	Fuel cell flow-through purge complete 
*	
*	Resume countdown at T-11 hours (2:58 p.m.)
*	
*	Activate the orbiter's fuel cells  (4:08 p.m.) 
*	Clear the blast danger area of all non-essential personnel
*	Switch Columbia's purge air to gaseous nitrogen (4:43 p.m.) 
*	
*	Enter planned 2-hour built-in hold at the T-6 hour mark (7:58 p.m.)
*	
*	Launch team verifies no violations of launch commit criteria prior to cryogenic loading of the external tank 
*	Clear pad of all personnel
*	
*	Resume countdown (9:58 p.m.)
*	
*	Chilldown of propellant transfer lines (9:28 p.m.)
*	Begin loading the external tank with about 500,000 gallons of cryogenic propellants (about 9:58 p.m.)
*	
*	Launch Day (Thursday, Feb. 28)
*	
*	Complete filling the external tank with its flight load of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellants (about 12:58 a.m.)
*	Final Inspection Team proceed to launch pad
*	
*	Enter planned 2-hour built-in hold at T-3 hours (12:58 a.m.)
*	
*	Perform inertial measurement unit preflight calibration
*	Align Merritt Island Launch Area (MILA) tracking antennas
*	Perform open loop test with Eastern Range
*	
*	Resume countdown at T-3 hours (2:58 a.m.)
*	
*	Crew departs Operations and Checkout Building for the pad (3:04 a.m.)
*	Complete close-out preparations in the white room
*	Check cockpit switch configurations
*	Flight crew begins entry into the orbiter (about 3:34 a.m.)
*	Astronauts perform air-to-ground voice checks with Launch and Mission Control
*	Close Columbia's crew hatch (about 4:48 a.m.)
*	Begin Eastern Range final network open loop command checks
*	Perform hatch seal and cabin leak checks
*	Complete white room close-out 
*	Close-out crew moves to fallback area
*	Primary ascent guidance data is transferred to the backup flight system
*	
*	Enter planned 10-minute hold at T-20 minutes (5:38 a.m.)
*	
*	NASA Test Director conducts final launch team briefings
*	Complete inertial measurement unit preflight alignments
*	
*	Resume countdown at T-20 minutes (5:48 a.m.)
*	
*	Transition the orbiter's onboard computers to launch configuration 
*	Start fuel cell thermal conditioning
*	Close orbiter cabin vent valves
*	Transition backup flight system to launch configuration
*	
*	Enter estimated 40-minute hold at T-9 minutes (5:59 a.m.)
*	
*	Launch Director, Mission Management Team and NASA Test Director conduct final polls for go/no go to launch
*	
*	Resume countdown at T-9 minutes (about 6:39 a.m.)
*	Start automatic ground launch sequencer (T-9:00 minutes)
*	Retract orbiter crew access arm (T-7:30)
*	Start mission recorders (T-6:15)
*	Start Auxiliary Power Units (T-5:00)
*	Arm SRB and ET range safety safe and arm devices (T-5:00)
*	Start liquid oxygen drainback (T-4:55)
*	Start orbiter aerosurface profile test (T-3:55)
*	Start main engine gimbal profile test (T-3:30)
*	Pressurize liquid oxygen tank (T-2:55)
*	Begin retraction of the gaseous oxygen vent arm (T-2:55)
*	Fuel cells to internal reactants (T-2:35)
*	Pressurize liquid hydrogen tank (T-1:57)
*	Deactivate SRB joint heaters (T-1:00)
*	Orbiter transfers from ground to internal power (T-0:50 seconds)
*	Ground Launch Sequencer go for auto sequence start (T-0:31 seconds)
*	SRB gimbal profile (T-0:21 seconds)
*	Ignition of three Space Shuttle main engines (T-6.6 seconds)
*	SRB ignition and liftoff (T-0)



CREW FOR MISSION STS-109
Commander (CDR): 	Scott D. Altman		
Pilot (PLT):	Duane G. Carey		
Payload Commander (MS1):	John M. Grunsfeld		
Mission Specialist (MS2):	Nancy Jane Currie		
Mission Specialist (MS3):	Richard M. Linnehan 		
Mission Specialist (MS4):	James H. Newman		
Mission Specialist (MS5):	Michael J. Massimino		
			
SUMMARY OF STS-109 LAUNCH DAY CREW ACTIVITIES

Wednesday, Feb. 27
9 p.m.	          Crew wake up
10:15 p.m.	Breakfast

Thursday, Feb. 28
*1:00 a.m.	Snack and photo opportunity
2:24 a.m.	Weather Briefing (CDR, PLT, MS2)
*2:24 a.m.	Don flight suits (MS1, MS3, MS4, MS5)
*2:34 a.m.	Don flight suits (CDR, PLT, MS2)
*3:04 a.m.	Depart for launch pad
*3:34 a.m.	Arrive at white room and begin ingress
*4:48 a.m.	Close crew hatch
*6:48 a.m.	Launch

* Televised events (times may vary slightly)
All times Eastern


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