[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference 7.286::space

Title:Space Exploration
Notice:Shuttle launch schedules, see Note 6
Moderator:PRAGMA::GRIFFIN
Created:Mon Feb 17 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:974
Total number of notes:18843

943.0. "STS-74 (Atlantis) Second MIR docking" by TROOA::SKLEIN (Nulli Secundus) Thu Jun 22 1995 03:13

	This note is for information for STS 74. This flight will be the  
	second shuttle mission to the MIR space station.

	The flight is scheduled for launch in October 1995.

	The crew list is

	STS 74	- Atlantis (15) October 26 - November 1 1995
		- S/MM-02; DM; ICBC-05; GPP**; GAS(2)**; 
		- CDR: Ken Cameron (3)
		- PLT: James Halsell (2)
		- MS1: Jerry Ross (5)
		- FE/MS2: William McArthur (2)
		- MS3: Chris Hadfield (1)
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
943.1Hardware for flight arrives in floridaTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusThu Jun 22 1995 03:1691
 
Ray Castillo
Headquarters, Washington, DC                    June 8, 1995
(Phone:  202/358-4555)
 
Kari Fluegel
Johnson Space Center, Houston
(Phone:  713/483-8649)
 
George Diller
Kennedy Space Center, FL
(Phone:  407/867-2468)
 
RELEASE:  95-86
 
RUSSIAN DOCKING MODULE, SOLAR ARRAYS ARRIVE IN FLORIDA 
 
     A Russian cargo plane has delivered equipment for the 
second Shuttle/Mir docking mission -- a major exchange of 
space flight components between the United States and Russia.  
During assembly of the international Space Station, this type 
of cooperative exchange will take place frequently.
 
     An Antonov An-124 cargo plane, the equivalent of a U.S. 
C-5 cargo plane, landed at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, FL at 
10:40 a.m. EDT yesterday.  The delivered cargo included a 
Shuttle-to-Mir docking module, the moduleUs ground support 
equipment, a portion of the docking module training mockup 
for use in crew contingency spacewalk training, and two solar 
arrays for the Russian Mir space station.
 
     "This is a major operational hardware exchange between 
the United States and Russia," said Tommy Holloway, manager 
of NASA's international Space Station Phase One Program 
Office. "As we move into the Space Station era, these 
equipment exchanges will become almost commonplace.  This 
particular hardware also is very important to the 
reconfiguration of Mir for future joint operations."
 
     The docking module, which will be carried to space 
aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis on the STS-74 mission later 
this year, is designed to improve the clearances for the 
Shuttle during future docking operations with the Russian 
space station Mir.
 
     During STS-74, Atlantis astronauts will use the 
Orbiter's robotic arm to place the docking module onto the 
Orbiter Docking System.  On the third day of that flight, 
Mission Commander Ken Cameron will ease the Orbiter up to Mir 
so that a link-up occurs with the docking module serving as a 
bridge between the two space vehicles.  When Atlantis leaves 
Mir after three days of joint operations, the undocking 
procedures will disconnect the Orbiter Docking System from 
the docking module, leaving it attached to the station for 
use on future missions.
 
     Before the docking module is loaded onto Atlantis, it 
will be prepared for flight in the Space Station Processing 
Facility (SSPF) at the Kennedy Space Center; it is the first 
piece of hardware to be processed in the SSPF.  The docking 
module will undergo a complete systems checkout and the two 
solar arrays and a trunnion assembly will be attached to the 
module.  The activity will be monitored by a team from the 
Russian organization RSC Energia.
 
     The two solar arrays will be used to extend Mir's 
lifetime and support U.S. science and technology research.  
One of the arrays was built as a cooperative project between 
the U.S. and Russia, combining proven Russian structures and 
mechanisms with advanced U.S. solar array modules. The second 
array is composed of all Russian components.  The solar 
arrays will be stowed on the side of the docking module for 
transport to Mir and will be installed some time after the 
completion of STS-74.
 
     After SSPF processing, the docking module and solar 
arrays will be transferred to the Operations and Checkout 
Building.  The module will then undergo a series of tests to 
verify electrical and mechanical compatibility with the Orbiter. 
 
     The docking module training mockup will be shipped to 
the Johnson Space Center.  Astronauts will use it for 
extravehicular activity training in the Neutral Buoyancy 
Tank.  No spacewalk is planned for the STS-74 mission, but 
crew members will practice several backup procedures that 
will be employed if problems occur with the module during the 
flight. The remaining sections of the training mockup will be 
shipped from Russia later this year to support spacewalk 
training for STS-76, the third docking mission.
 
                         -end-
943.2Launch Date SetTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusMon Oct 30 1995 18:5636
Ed Campion
Headquarters, Washington, DC                October 26, 1995
(Phone:  202/358-1780)
 
Bruce Buckingham
Kennedy Space Center, FL
(Phone:  407/867-2468)
 
NOTE TO EDITORS:  N95-71
 
LAUNCH DATE SET FOR SECOND SHUTTLE-MIR DOCKING MISSION
 
     NASA managers have set Nov. 11, 1995, as the official launch date for the 
STS-74 mission -- the second in a series of missions between the U.S. Space 
Shuttle and the Russian Space Station Mir.
 
     The primary purpose of the Space Shuttle Atlantis STS-74 mission is the 
installation of a docking module that will improve clearance between the 
Shuttle and Mir's solar arrays during subsequent dockings.  Atlantis' crew 
also will return to Earth experiment samples, equipment for repair and 
analysis and products manufactured on the station.  
 
     The Nov. 11 launch of Atlantis is planned for approximately 7:56 a.m. EST 
from Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39-A.  The actual launch time may 
vary by a few minutes based on calculations of Mir's precise location in space 
at the time of liftoff.  The available launch period, or "window" to launch 
Atlantis, is approximately seven minutes each day.  
 
     The STS-74 mission is scheduled to last approximately eight days. Docking 
with Mir will occur on the fourth day of the flight.  An on-time launch and 
nominal mission duration would have Atlantis and her crew returning to Earth 
on Nov. 19 with a landing at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility, 
FL,  at approximately 1:28 p.m. EST. 

     The STS-74 mission will be the 15th mission for Atlantis and the 73rd for 
the Space Shuttle system.
943.3ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 08 1995 06:1315
    Launch:
    
    Launch November 11, 1995 at 7:56am EST. Launch Window is 6 min 57 sec.
    (Reference KSC Shuttle Status 11/01/1995). This will lead to an
    estimated MIR docking on 11/14/95 at about 2:20am. 
    
    On 11/07/95, Engineers have determined no additional work is required
    to verify the readiness for flight of the STS-74 solid rocket boosters
    in light of extremely small cracks found on hold-down posts attached to
    other boosters that flew earlier this year. Previous inspections on the
    boosters at the pad indicate no cracking is present. Mission managers
    will be fully briefed on the matter at the scheduled management team
    meeting to be held at KSC on Thursday. (Reference KSC Shuttle Status
    11/07/1995). 
    
943.4Should make for excellent AM viewing of both MIR & STS-74 :)NETCAD::BATTERSBYWed Nov 08 1995 16:187
943.5Flight Control TeamTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusThu Nov 09 1995 16:59207
943.6Countdown briefingsTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusFri Nov 10 1995 16:1387
Ed Campion
Headquarters, Washington, DC             November 7, 1995
(Phone:  202/358-1778)
 
Lisa Malone
Kennedy Space Center, FL
(Phone:  407/867-2468)
 
NOTE TO EDITORS:  N95-75
 
STS-74 COUNTDOWN BRIEFINGS/LAUNCH COVERAGE SET FOR NOV. 8-11
 
     A series of briefings will begin tomorrow from NASA's 
Kennedy Space Center, FL, in connection with the scheduled 
Saturday launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-74.
 
     On Nov. 10 at 9 a.m. EST, NASA managers will conduct a 
briefing on how STS-74 mission activities relate to ongoing 
work with the international Space Station.  A pre-launch 
news conference will be held at 10 a.m. EST, to discuss STS-
74 mission readiness and objectives.  Also, NASA Televison 
will replay pre-flight briefings held last month at NASA's 
Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX.
 
	Daily countdown status briefings also will be held to 
update news media on final processing activities prior to 
launch.  Atlantis is scheduled to liftoff at 7:56 a.m. EST, Nov. 11. 
 
      Attached is a listing of times, subjects and 
participants for each briefing.  Also noted are key STS-74 
pre-launch activities and NASA Television replays.
 
                        -end-
 
STS-74 MISSION PRE-FLIGHT BRIEFINGS & KEY EVENTS
 
LAUNCH - 3 DAYS (Wednesday, November 8, 1995)
 
7:00 a.m.      STS-74 Countdown Begins
 
9:00 a.m.    Countdown Status Briefing
             Moderator: KSC Public Information Officer (PIO)
Briefers:    Bill Dowdell, Shuttle Test Director
             Lesa Roe, Kennedy Space Center (KSC) STS-74 Payloads Manager
             Ed Priselac, Shuttle Weather Officer
 
11:00 a.m    STS-74 Crew Arrives at KSC Shuttle Landing Facility
 
LAUNCH - 2 DAYS (Thursday, November 9, 1995)
 
9:00 a.m.    Countdown Status Briefing
             Moderator:  KSC PIO
Briefers:    John Stealey, NASA Test Director
             Lesa Roe, KSC STS-74 Payloads Manager
             Ed Priselac, Shuttle Weather Officer
 
LAUNCH - 1 DAY (Friday, November 10, 1995)
 
9:00 a.m.    Space Station Program Briefing
             Moderator:  HQ Public Affairs Officer
Briefers:    Wil Trafton, Director, International Space Station, NASA Headquarters
             Doug Stone, Vice President of international Space Station, Boeing
 
10:00 a.m.  STS-74 Pre-Launch Press Conference
Moderator:  KSC News Chief
Briefers:   Tommy Holloway, NASA Shuttle Program Manager, 
	    Johnson Space Center (JSC)
            Dr. Harry Holloway, Assoc. Admin, Office of Life 
            & Microgravity Sciences, NASA Headquarters
            Frank Culbertson, Acting Director, Phase One Program, JSC
            Yuriy P. Semenov, President, RSC Energia
            Valeriy V. Ryumin, RSC Energia
            Dr. Steve MacLean, Director-General, Astronaut Program, CSA
            Bob Sieck, Director of Shuttle Opertations, KSC 
            Capt. Scot Heckman, KSC Staff Weather Liaison
 
LAUNCH DAY (Saturday, November 11, 1995)
 
2:30 a.m.   Begin NASA TV Coverage of STS-74 Launch Day Activities
 
7:56 a.m.   LAUNCH OF SPACE SHUTTLE ATLANTIS ON MISSION STS-74
 
9:00 a.m.   Post-Launch Press Conference Moderator:  KSC Launch Commentator
Briefers:   Loren Shriver, Mgr., Launch Integration for the 
            Shuttle Program Jim Harrington, KSC Launch Director
 
All times listed are Eastern
943.7Mission Control Status Report #1ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Mon Nov 13 1995 06:2636
                            Mission Control Status Report #1
                                            STS-74
    
    Sunday, November 12, 1995   11 a.m. CST
    
    The Space Shuttle Atlantis launched on time at 6:31 a.m. CST Sunday 
    marking the beginning of a mission in which the shuttle will rendezvous
    with  Russia's Space Station Mir and deliver a permanent docking port
    that will be  used during future shuttle flights to Mir.
    
    About 43 minutes after launch, a two minute and 13 second engine firing 
    changed the shuttle's path into a 162 nautical mile circular orbit.
    Once on  orbit, the five crew members began configuring Atlantis for
    on-orbit  operations. Atlantis' payload bay doors were opened about 90
    minutes into  the flight, followed by a "go" for on-orbit operations.
    
    STS-74 Commander Ken Cameron and Pilot Jim Halsell, about three hours 
    into the last flight of the year, fired the orbiter's reaction control
    jets in the  first of a series of rendezvous burns that refined
    Atlantis' path to Mir.  Shortly after that jet firing, the first
    Canadian mission specialist, Chris  Hadfield, activated the Russian
    built docking module and its systems. The  docking module is housed in
    Atlantis' payload bay. Hadfield will use the  orbiter's robot arm early
    Tuesday to mate the docking module with the  Atlantis' Orbiter Docking
    System prior to the orbiter's link-up with Mir early  Wednesday. The
    docking is scheduled for 12:28 a.m. CST Wednesday.
    
    All systems aboard Atlantis are performing well.
    
    Crew members - Cameron, Halsell, and mission specialists Chris
    Hadfield,  Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur - will begin their sleep period
    at 12:31 p.m.  CST today and awaken at 8:31 p.m. CST today.
    
    The JSC Newsroom will close at noon CST today and reopen at 12:30 a.m. 
    Monday.
    
943.8Mission Control Status Report #2ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Mon Nov 13 1995 06:2838
    Mission Control Status Report #2 STS-74
    
    Sunday, November 12, 1995   5 p.m. CST
    
    Five astronauts continue to rest aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis,
    awaiting an 8:31 p.m. CST wake-up call that will start their first full
    day of work delivering a permanent shuttle docking port to the Russian
    Mir Space Station.
    
    Activities for the coming day will focus on preparing to connect the
    Russian Docking Module to the shuttle airlock and getting Mission
    Specialists Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur ready for a contingency space
    walk should anything unexpected happen during Tuesday's move of the
    docking module.
    
    Maneuvers continuing the process of the shuttle rendezvous with
    Russia's Space Station Mir will resume at 10:11 p.m. CST when Commander
    Ken Cameron and Pilot Jim Halsell kick off the NC 2 burn. The NC 3 burn
    will occur at 10:09 a.m. CST Monday. Docking is scheduled for 12:28
    a.m. CST Wednesday.
    
    Mission Specialist Chris Hadfield will test the robot arm that will
    lift the module out of its payload bay moorings. With the help of
    Mission Specialist Bill McArthur, Hadfield also will power up and check
    the Orbiter Space Vision system that will be used to precisely align
    the robot arm. Cameron will set up the VHF radio gear that will be used
    for shuttle/Mir communications during the rendezvous.
    
    Ross and McArthur will inspect their space suits and pre-breath pure
    oxygen for an hour and a half to purge nitrogen bubbles from their
    bodies and prevent a condition known as "the bends" should a space walk
    be necessary. The pair is not expected to don the space suits unless a
    space walk is required.
    
    The STS-74 crew also is scheduled to be interviewed by the Canadian
    news media beginning at 6:31 a.m. CST.
    
    
943.9Launch was delayed 24 hrsERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Mon Nov 13 1995 06:5425
    Launch:
    
    Launch November 12, 1995 at 7:30:43.071 A.M. EST. Launch Window was 10
    min 09 sec but Atlantis lifted off at the begining of the window. White
    Room close out completed at 6:18am EST. At 7:12am EST the mission
    management team was polled and all stations were "go for launch" except
    SRO. Weather constraint, cloud ceiling below 6000ft for RTLS abort.
    Range cleared for launch at 7:20am EST. Main Engines cutoff at 7:39am
    EST . 
    
    Launch attempt on November 11, 1995 at 7:56am EST was scrubbed due to
    poor weather at the Transatlantic Abort (TAL) Site. A scrub due to a
    TAL site has only occured once before on 1/9/86 for  Columbia's launch
    attempt on mission STS-61C. The mission management team decided to
    enter a 24 hour scrub turnaround and attempt a launch on 11/12/95.
    Launch Window was 6 min 57 and the countdown had begun on schedule. The
    crew was onboard when the scrub was called at the T-minus 5 minute mark
    at approximately 7:52am EST.  On 11/09/95, Pad 39-A was cleared to load
    the onboard cryogenic tanks with liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen
    reactants. Reactant loading has been completed. The reactants will
    provide electricity for the  orbiter and crew while in space and
    drinking water as a by-product during their 8-day mission. ( Reference
    KSC Shuttle Status 11/09/1995). 
    
    
943.10Mission Objectives:ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Mon Nov 13 1995 06:5756
    Mission Objectives:
    
    
    The STS-74 mission is the second of seven planned Space Shuttle-Mir
    link-ups between 1995 and 1997, including rendezvous and docking and
    crew transfers, which will pave the way toward assembly of the
    international Space Station beginning in November 1997. Major
    objectives include docking with the Mir space station and delivery of a
    Russian docking module and 2 solar arrays. 
    
    This mission marks the first time astronauts from the European Space
    Agency, Canada, Russia and the U.S will be in space on the same complex
    at one time -- a prime example of nations that will be represented on
    the international Space Station. 
    
    Atlantis will carry the Russian-built Docking Module, which has
    multi-mission androgynous docking mechanisms at top and bottom. During
    the flight to Mir, the crew will use the Orbiter's Remote Manipulator
    System robot arm to hoist the Docking Module from the payload bay and
    berth its bottom androgynous unit atop Atlantis' Orbiter Docking
    System. Atlantis will then dock to Kristall using the Docking Module's
    top androgynous unit. After three days, Atlantis will undock from the
    Docking Module's bottom androgynous unit and leave the Docking Module
    permanently docked to Kristall, where it will provide clearance between
    the Shuttle and Mir's solar arrays during subsequent dockings. 
    
    
    Atlantis will deliver water, supplies, and equipment, including two new
    solar arrays -- one Russian and one jointly-developed -- to upgrade the
    Mir. It will return to Earth experiment samples, equipment for repair
    and analysis and products manufactured on the station. 
    
    Also flying aboard Atlantis is the GPP payload consisting of two
    experiments -- the GPP experiment and the Photogrammetric Appendage
    Structural Dynamics Experiment (). The payload is managed by  Goddard
    Space Flight Center's Special Payloads Division. 
    
    The GPP will study the Earth's thermosphere, ionosphere and mesosphere
    energetics and dynamics using broadband spectroscopy. GPP also will
    study spacecraft interactions with the atmosphere by observing Shuttle
    and Mir glow, Shuttle engine firings, water dumps and fuel cell purges. 
    
    Three cannisters, located throughout the cargo bay, will
    photogrammetrically record structural response data of the Mir solar
    arrays during the docked phase of the mission. These data will be
    analyzed on the ground to verify the use of photogrammetric techniques
    to characterize the structural dynamics of the array, thus
    demonstrating that this technology can result in cost and risk
    reduction for the international Space Station on-orbit structural
    verification. 
    
    Atlantis will also carry back to earth the University of California at
    Berkeley Trek Experiment which has been in orbit onboard Mir for the
    past four years. 
    
    
943.11skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHERI've advocated term limits for 19 years! - Rep Bob DornanMon Nov 13 1995 15:007
BTW, the shuttle web site says that if the government shuts down tomorrow,
that the web site may not be available, and if it is, it may not have
up-to-date info.

I don't know about other info sources (NASA TV, etc).

Burns
943.12Preliminary NASA TV scheduleTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusMon Nov 13 1995 16:17331
	In the Toronto area, our local cable company is carrying NASA select
	so if they go off the air tonight, I'll know. 


    
    *********************************************************************** 
 
                                 NASA TV SCHEDULE 
                               STS-74/SHUTTLE-MIR 2 
                                    11/07/95 
 
    *********************************************************************** 
 
    NASA TV programming can be accessed through GTE Spacenet 2, 
    transponder 5.  The frequency is 3880 MHz with an orbital position 
    of 69 degrees West Longitude, with audio at 6.8 MHz.  This is a full 
    transponder service and will be operational 24 hours a day. 
 
    This NASA Television schedule of mission coverage is available 
    on Comstore, the mission TV schedule computer bulletin board service. 
    Call 713/483-5817 and follow the prompts to access this service. 
    The schedule is also available via the Internet.  The address is 
    FTP.HQ.NASA.GOV.  Change directories to /PUB/PAO/STATRPT/JSC/TVSKED. 
 
    A two-hour package of daily highlights will be played for Alaska and 
    Hawaii each Flight Day at 11:00 p.m. Central time.  The highlights will 
    begin on launch day and continue through landing.  The satellite 
    carrier information can be found in this schedule after launch. 
 
    -------------------------Wednesday, November 8 ------------------------ 
                                Launch -3 Days 
 
                     SUBJECT                  SITE                 CST 
                     --------                 ----                 --- 
 
           COUNTDOWN STATUS BRIEFING          KSC                 8:00 AM 
 
           CREW ARRIVAL                       KSC                10:00 AM 
 
           NASA TV VIDEO FILE                 HQ                 11:00 AM 
 
    -------------------------Thursday, November 9 ------------------------- 
                                Launch -2 Days 
 
           COUNTDOWN STATUS BRIEFING          KSC                 8:00 AM 
 
           NASA TV VIDEO FILE                 HQ                 11:00 AM 
 
           GALILEO PRE-ARRIVAL NEWS           JPL                12:00 PM 
           CONFERENCE 
 
    ------------------------- Friday, November 10 ------------------------- 
                                 Launch -1 Day 
 
           SPACE STATION PROGRAM NEWS         KSC                  8:00 AM 
           CONFERENCE 
 
           STS-74 PRELAUNCH NEWS CONFERENCE   KSC                  9:00 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
           NASA TV VIDEO FILE                 HQ                  11:00 AM 
 
    -------------------------- Saturday, November 11 ---------------------- 
                                       FD 1 
    ORBIT            SUBJECT                  SITE       MET        CST 
    -----            -------                  ----       ---      --- 
           STS-74 MISSION COVERAGE BEGINS     KSC                 01:30 AM 
 
           LAUNCH                             KSC     00/00:00    06:56 AM 
 
           NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        JSC     00/00:06    07:02 AM 
           SWITCHED TO JSC 
 
           MECO                                       00/00:08    07:04 AM 
 
    1      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        KSC     00/00:13    07:09 AM 
           SWITCHED TO KSC 
 
    1      LAUNCH REPLAYS                     KSC     00/00:13    07:09 AM 
           (APPROX. 5 MINUTES AFTER MECO) 
           T=30:00 
 
    1      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        JSC     00/00:43    07:39 AM 
           SWITCHED TO JSC 
 
    2      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        KSC     00/01:04    08:00 AM 
           SWITCHED TO KSC 
 
    2      POST-LAUNCH PRESS CONFERENCE       KSC     00/01:04    08:00 AM 
 
    2      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        JSC     00/02:04    09:00 AM 
           SWITCHED TO JSC 
 
    2      Ku BAND ANTENNA DEPLOY                     00/02:30    09:26 AM 
           (NOT TELEVISED) 
 
    3      "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     00/03:34    10:30 AM 
 
    4      LAUNCH ENGINEERING REPLAYS         JSC     00/05:04    12:00 PM 
           T=30:00 
 
    5      CREW SLEEP                                 00/06:00    12:56 PM 
 
    5      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        KSC     00/06:04    01:00 PM 
           SWITCHED TO KSC 
 
    5      FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              KSC     00/06:04    01:00 PM 
 
    5      NASA TELEVISION ORIGINATION        JSC     00/06:34    01:30 PM 
           SWITCHED TO JSC 
 
    6      FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     00/08:04    03:00 PM 
 
    9      FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     00/12:34    07:30 PM 
 
    10     CREW WAKE UP                               00/14:00    08:56 PM 
 
    -------------------------- Sunday, November 12 ------------------------ 
                                     FD 2 
    18     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     01/02:04    09:00 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    19     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     01/04:04    11:00 AM 
 
    21     CREW SLEEP                                 01/06:00    12:56 PM 
 
    21     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     01/06:04    01:00 PM 
 
    22     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     01/07:34    02:30 PM 
 
    25     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     01/12:34    07:30 PM 
 
    26     CREW WAKE UP                               01/14:00    08:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------- Monday, November 13 ------------------------- 
                                     FD 3 
    29     DOCKING MODULE UNBERTH                     01/17:40    12:36 AM 
           (may not be televised live) 
 
    29     DOCKING MODULE/ODS INSTALLATION            01/18:25    01:21 AM 
           (may not be televised live) 
 
    34     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     02/02:04    09:00 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    35     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     02/04:04    11:00 AM 
 
    37     CREW SLEEP (6 hours)                       02/06:00    12:56 PM 
 
    37     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     02/06:04    01:00 PM 
    38     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     02/07:34    02:30 PM 
 
    40     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     02/11:04    06:00 PM 
 
    41     CREW WAKE UP                               02/12:00    06:56 PM 
 
    41     MIR RENDEZVOUS OPERATIONS BEGIN            02/13:00    07:56 PM 
 
    43     TI BURN                                    02/15:20    10:16 PM 
 
    44     R-BAR ARRIVAL                              02/16:30    11:26 PM 
 
    ------------------------- Tuesday, November 14 ------------------------ 
                                      FD 4 
 
            RENDEZVOUS AND DOCKING TELEVISION FROM ATLANTIS AND MIR WILL 
            BE SEEN AS AVAILABLE THROUGH SATELLITES OR TRACKING STATIONS 
 
    44     R-BAR 170 FT STATIONKEEPING                02/17:15    12:11 AM 
 
    44     RESUME APPROACH TO MIR                     02/17:42    12:38 AM 
 
    45     R-BAR 30 FT STATIONKEEPING                 02/18:12    01:08 AM 
 
    45     BEGIN FINAL APPROACH                       02/18:17    01:13 AM 
 
    45     ATLANTIS/MIR DOCKING                       02/18:24    01:20 AM 
           (may not be televised live) 
 
    45     ATLANTIS/MIR HARD MATE                     02/18:45    01:41 AM 
 
    45     VTR PLAYBACK OF ATLANTIS/MIR               02/19:19    02:15 AM 
           DOCKING 
 
    46     HATCH OPENING AND WELCOMING        TDRW    02/20:39    03:35 AM 
           CEREMONY 
 
    50     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     03/02:04    09:00 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    51     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     03/04:04    11:00 AM 
 
    52     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     03/06:04    01:00 PM 
 
    53     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     03/07:34    02:30 PM 
 
    54     CREW SLEEP                                 03/08:00    02:56 PM 
 
    57     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     03/13:04    08:00 PM 
 
    59     CREW WAKE UP                               03/16:00    10:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------ Wednesday, November 15 ----------------------- 
                                     FD 5 
    64     GIFT EXCHANGE                      TDRE    03/23:25    06:21 AM 
           T=20:00 
 
    65     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     04/01:49    08:45 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    67     CANADIAN VIP CALL                  TDRE    04/04:10    11:06 AM 
 
    67     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     04/05:04    12:00 PM 
 
    68     GALILEO PROBE NEWS CONFERENCE      AMES    04/05:34    12:30 PM 
 
    69     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     04/07:34    02:30 PM 
 
    69     CREW SLEEP                                 04/08:00    02:56 PM 
 
    71     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     04/11:04    06:00 PM 
 
    73     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     04/13:04    08:00 PM 
 
    74     CREW WAKE UP                               04/16:00    10:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------ Thursday, November 16 ------------------------ 
                                    FD 6 
    81     JOINT CREW NEWS CONFERENCE         TDRE    05/01:30    08:26 AM 
           T=30:00 
 
    82     FAREWELL CEREMONY                  TDRE    05/03:10    10:06 AM 
           T=15:00 
 
    83     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     05/05:04    12:00 PM 
 
    83     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     05/05:34    12:30 PM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    84     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     05/06:34    01:30 PM 
 
    85     CREW SLEEP                                 05/08:00    02:56 PM 
 
    87     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     05/11:04    06:00 PM 
 
    88     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     05/13:04    08:00 PM 
 
    90     CREW WAKE UP                               05/16:00    10:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------- Friday, November 17 ------------------------- 
                                      FD 7 
              
              ATLANTIS UNDOCKING AND FLY-AROUND TELEVISION WILL BE 
           SEEN AS AVAILABLE THROUGH SATELLITES AND TRACKING STATIONS 
 
    92     ATLANTIS/MIR UNDOCKING                     05/18:38    01:34 AM 
           (may not be televised live) 
 
    93     SEPERATION BURN                            05/20:23    03:19 AM 
 
    98     MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     06/03:34    10:30 AM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    99     "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     06/05:04    12:00 PM 
 
    98     FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     06/06:04    01:00 PM 
 
    101    CREW SLEEP                                 06/09:00    03:56 PM 
 
    102    FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     06/11:04    06:00 PM 
 
    104    FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     06/13:04    08:00 PM 
 
    106    CREW WAKE UP                               06/17:00    11:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------ Saturday, November 18 ------------------------ 
                                     FD 8 
    113    "MISSION UPDATE"                   JSC     07/04:04    11:00 AM 
 
    111    MISSION STATUS BRIEFING            JSC     07/05:34    12:30 PM 
           (subject to change) 
 
    114    Ku BAND ANTENNA STOW                       07/05:35    12:31 PM 
           (not televised) 
 
    113    FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE              JSC     07/06:34    01:30 PM 
 
    117    CREW SLEEP                                 07/09:00    03:56 PM 
 
    118    FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     07/11:04    06:00 PM 
 
    119    FLIGHT DAY VIDEO FILE REPLAY       JSC     07/13:04    08:00 PM 
 
    122    CREW WAKE UP                               07/17:00    11:56 PM 
 
    ------------------------- Sunday, November 19-------------------------- 
                                     FD 9 
    129    DEORBIT BURN                               08/04:29    11:25 AM 
           (NOT TELEVISED) 
 
    130    KSC LANDING                        KSC     08/05:29    12:25 PM 
 
           LANDING REPLAYS                    KSC     L + 20 minutes 
 
           POST-LANDING PRESS CONFERENCE      JSC     L + 60 minutes 
 
           ASTRONAUT POST-LANDING PRESS 
           CONFERENCE  (COMMANDER AND OTHER 
           AVAILABLE CREW MEMBERS)            KSC     L +  6 hours 
 
 
    *********************************************************************** 
                             DEFINITION OF TERMS 
    *********************************************************************** 
 
    CST:      Central Standard Time 
    FD:       Flight Day 
    HQ:       NASA Headquarters 
    JSC:      Johnson Space Center 
    KSC:      Kennedy Space Center 
    MECO:     Main Engine Cut Off 
    MET:      Mission Elapsed Time: the time which begins at the moment 
              of launch and is read: days/hours:minutes.  Launch=00/00:00 
    MIR:      Russian Space Station 
    STS:      Space Transportation System 
    T=:       Time equivalent: used for duration of event 
    TBD:      To be determined 
    TDRE,W:   Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, East and West longitudes 
    TX:       Transponder 

943.13ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Tue Nov 14 1995 06:256
    
    There is no update on the WWW sites -looks like it could be off-line.
    
    ( Heard this morning [UK] that there could be 800,000
      people layed off as the budget did not go through congress? last
      night )
943.14They'll be back, eventually19472::petertrigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertaintyTue Nov 14 1995 14:137
Not layed off.  Sent home till the budget gets worked out and there
is money to pay them again.  Of course, that is not to say that
eventually a portion of them will NOT get laid off.  But that's
a topic for another notes file.


PeterT
943.15Docking Module successfully docked to AtlantisTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusTue Nov 14 1995 21:1014

	They did successfully dock the Russian Docking Module with the 
	Orbital Docking System on the shuttle. That took place about 
	2:30 am EST this morning. They checked out the docking module
	and held a news conference with CNN in the docking module.
	It has what looks like a lot of cabinets on either side and a lot of
	extra room. 

	The docking should take place tomorrow morning again in the wee hours.

	I am watchng NASA select so I'll try to provide updates.

	Susan
943.16ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 15 1995 06:1520
    From the WWW...
    
    NASA Kennedy Space Center Home Page - Offline
    
    The Kennedy Space Center World Wide Web server which is usually at this
    address is temporarily offline. It has been replaced with a small
    battery backed up computer bearing this message. The US Government has
    shutdown all non-critical services and the NASA Civil Service employees
    which normally run the server have been sent home on indefinite
    furlough. We hope to resume this service to you in the very near
    future. 
    
    
    Until it's not there - you don't realise how much you miss it !
    
    Could someone keep us posted on what's going on with this mission as
     news over here in the UK is scarce - to say the least.
    
    As an aside question - who runs the NASA select channel ??
    
943.17Shuttle Docked to MirLHOTSE::DAHLWed Nov 15 1995 11:372
I heard on the radio this morming that the shuttle bas docked with Mir.
						-- Tom
943.18Motha-Nature seems to have kept me from viewing it... :(NETCAD::BATTERSBYWed Nov 15 1995 14:3428
    I had planned to stayed up to watch it on our town's public Educational 
    access channel but late in the evening we must have lost power in the 
    part of town where the cable head-end is. When the cable channels came 
    back on, the NASA Select coverage was not on (dish receiver at the high 
    school probably defaults to off when power is interrupted). Later, before
    retiring to bed, I checked again, and there was a snowy signal, that
    seemed to suggest that the satellite dish direction had been moved 
    slightly from the high winds experienced last night.
    This morning, before leaving the house for work, NASA Select was on
    again. So either, the combination of winds, & loss of power kept me
    from seeing the docking, or NASA Select shut down transmission
    overnight of coverage. While watching, I only saw views of the control
    room, no tv from the shuttle.
    Given the vagaries and lack of day-time coverage of NASA Select by our
    cable company (legitimately because the channel is used for
    pre-contracted educational purposes), I'm tempted again to have to
    consider the option of buying a satellite dish. I'd really like to have
    un-interrupted access to NASA Select, and the only way I see this
    happening is to get my own dish. I already know I have line-of-sight 
    access to the bird NASA Select broadcasts from. So it's just a case of
    whether I want to plunk down the cash to buy used or new dish/receiver
    components. I recall in here or in some other notes file that someone
    was looking into requesting DSS Direct-TV folks to add NASA Select to their
    channel selection. I know I would also have line-of-sight access to the
    Direct-TV bird too. I haven't heard if this developed any further
    momentum.
    
    Bob
943.19UpdateTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusWed Nov 15 1995 16:4744

	Well the docking was successful. There was no live video feed of the
	docking, just a computer display of the shuttle coming up thru
	a cone up to the MIR space station. The computer display at times 
	made it look like the shuttle was out of alignment, but I realize
	that was just the realtime update lag. Cameron flew the docking 
	perfectly, stationkeeping at 170 ft, and then at 30 ft. There was
	some video from MIR at the 30 foot distance in black and white, but
	the shuttle was clearly visable. Then the final docking took place
	as I said you could watch the computer display and see the distance
	numbers winding down to 0 ft. They replayed video of the docking
	after the event and it was real smooth. The contact between the
	2 vehicles was a small bump in one camera angle only. After, the
	docking and the pressurization checks, video in the docking module
	was live. This should Hadfield removing the bracket for the centre
	line camera that was used for docking. There is a small port window
	in the docking module hatch. Thru it could be seen the cosmonauts.
	When the hatch opening ceremony was to begin, Cameron unwound the 
	latch mechanism and pulled on the hatch, but it didn't budge. So
	he braced himself by putting his feet on the bottom of the module
	and pulled hard. The hatch popped open and then he and Gidzenko 
	shook hands. Cameron presented fresh flowers (looked like pink 
	carnations) and a box of chocolates to Gidzenko. Then the other 
	cosmonauts moved into the docking module to greet the rest of the
	astronauts.

	Later both crews moved thru MIR to the core module for congratulations
	from NASA chief (forget his name) in Kaliningrad and Yuri Koptev head 
	of Russian space agency. While floating thru MIR, I was amazed at how 
	crowded it seemed with all the equipment stowed everywhere.

	Of some interest, Sergei Krikalev (STS 60) was in Houston as an
	assistant CAPCOM to Story Musgrave handling the Russian with the MIR
	crew and with Moscow. As well, Hoot Gibson (flew the first MIR docking)
	and Bill Readdy (will fly a future MIR docking) were in Mission
	Control as well watching the docking live.

	Watching Mission control, it is very quiet now, the crews are about
	ready to go to sleep.

	Due to the US government shutdown, interviews with the crews are
	not being done. I'm sure the crew appreciates the spare time, they
	looked very busy.
943.20ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Thu Nov 16 1995 06:179
    
    Managed to see a 120 second(!) clip on SKY news last night.
    
    Just showed MIR, shaking hands all round and a group shot in MIR.
    
    Also showed how empty the control centre is, saying something like
     they are running this on a skeleton crew.
    
     
943.21Saw docking on daily video highlights replay....NETCAD::BATTERSBYThu Nov 16 1995 15:0312
    They played the daily video highlights last evening, and I got to
    see (in edited form), the docking. I noticed that the "docking twang"
    was evident more so than I think I remember on the first docking mission 
    last summer. Perhaps with the addition of the special docking module
    added, I'm sure there were some new motions added to the whole complex
    when mated. What I mean by "docking twang" is immediately after the
    docking leafs capture each other, there is some damping out motions
    that occur. It didn't last for more than 5-6 seconds. Then they started
    closing the collars to their final resting position to seal the 
    tunnel air-tight.
    
    Bob
943.22skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHERMinister of Acronyms, Holder of Past Knowledge, DNRCThu Nov 16 1995 15:274
Is Atlantis doing the attitude control for the whole station as it did the
last time?

Burns
943.23MSFC Launch SummaryTROOA::SKLEINNulli SecundusThu Nov 16 1995 19:56205
GEORGE C. MARSHALL SPACE FLIGHT CENTER
 
STS-74
November 12, 1995
 
 
 
 
______________________
George Harsh
Chairman, MSFC Space Shuttle
Flight  Evaluation Team      
 
 
STS-74
MISSION DATA SUMMARY
 
PAYLOAD MANIFEST:
PAYLOAD BAY         Russian Docking Module
                    Orbiter Docking System
                    IMAX Cargo Bay Camera           
 
                    GLO
 
MID-DECK            Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment-II              
                    (SAREX-II)
 
INSTRUMENTATION:    None Assigned
LAUNCH DATE:        November 12, 1995
LAUNCH WINDOW:      6:30 am - 6:37 am CST
LAUNCH TIME:        95:316:12:30:43.013 GMT
                    6:30 am CST
SSME#3 START TIME:      95:316:12:30:36.459
SSME#2 START TIME:      95:316:12:30:36.586
SSME#1 START TIME:      95:316:12:30:36.699
LAUNCH SITE:            KSC Pad 39A
MOBILE LAUNCH PLATFORM: MLP-2
ORBITAL INCLINATION:    51.6 degrees
ORBITAL ALTITUDE:       160 nautical miles
INSERTION MODE:         Direct
MISSION DURATION:       8 + (1) days nominal
PRIMARY LANDING SITE:   Kennedy Space Center, FL
ABORT LANDING SITES:    TAL (Prime)   - Zaragoza, Spain
                        TAL Alternates -   Moron, Spain
                                         Ben Guerir, Morocco
 
VEHICLE DATA
 
ORBITER:                Atlantis OV-104 (15th Flight)
EXTERNAL TANK:          ET-74
MAIN ENGINES:           2012, 2026, 2032 (All are Phase II)
POWER LEVEL:            Nominal...........104/67/104%
                        Abort....................104%
                        To Avoid Ditching........109%
SRBs:                   BI-076
SRM Set Nr.:            Left   - 360T051A
                        Right  - 360T051B
SRM Burnrate (Delivered):       LH - 0.371 IPS at 60 deg F
                                RH - 0.371 IPS at 60 deg F
 
CREW
 
COMMANDER:           Ken Cameron
SHUTTLE PILOT:       Jim Halsell 
MISSION SPECIALIST:  Chris Hadfield      
MISSION SPECIALIST:  Jerry Ross      
MISSION SPECIALIST:  William McArthur 
 
 
1.0   STS-74 FLIGHT SUMMARY
 
The STS-74 mission was successfully flown from Launch Pad 39A (MLP-2) at
the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) on November 12, 1995.  This is a civilian
mission of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) with
the primary objective of the second rendezvous and docking with the
Russian Space Station MIR, along with delivery of the Russian-built
Docking Module.  Several other payloads will also fly on the Orbiter in the
payload bay and on the middeck. 
 
This was the seventy third (73rd) flight of the Space Shuttle program. 
RSRM ignition occurred at approximately 6:30 A.M. Central Daylight Time
(CDT) (95:316:12:30:43.013 GMT).  There were no unscheduled holds.  Winds
at liftoff were from approximately 289 degrees at 6.7 knots; the ambient
temperature was 50 B0 F; the barometric pressure was 30.06 in. Hg; and the
relative humidity was 82%. 
 
 
 
2.0   FLIGHT RESULTS
 
2.1   SOLID ROCKET BOOSTERS -   SRBs BI-076, 
                                RSRMs 360T051A, 360T051B
 
All Solid Rocket Booster (SRB) systems performed as expected.  The SRB
prelaunch countdown was normal, and no SRB or RSRM Launch Commit Criteria
(LCC) or Operational Maintenance Requirements Specification Document
(OMRSD) violations occurred.  Power up and operation of all igniter, and
field joint heaters was accomplished routinely.  All RSRM temperatures
were maintained within acceptable limits throughout the countdown.  For
this flight, the low pressure heated ground purge in the SRB aft skirt was
used to maintain the case/nozzle joint temperatures within the required
LCC ranges.  At T- 15 minutes, the purge was changed to high pressure to
inert the SRB aft skirt. 
 
Preliminary data indicates that the flight performance of both RSRMs was
well within the allowable performance envelopes, and was typical of the
performance observed on previous flights.  The RSRM propellant mean bulk
temperature (PMBT) was 74 =B0 F at liftoff.  Both SRBs were successfully
separated from the External Tank (ET) at T + 123.004 seconds, and reports
from the recovery area, based on visual sightings, indicate that the
deceleration subsystems performed as designed.  Both SRBs were observed
during descent, and are currently floating near the retrieval ships. 
 
 
2.2   EXTERNAL TANK - ET-74
 
All objectives and requirements associated with External Tank (ET)
propellant loading and flight operations were met.  All ET electrical
equipment and instrumentation operated satisfactorily.  ET purge and
heater operations were monitored and all performed properly.  No ET LCC or
OMRSD violations were identified. 
 
Typical ice/frost formations were observed on the ET during the countdown 2E 
 
There was no observed ice or frost on the acreage areas of the ET.  Normal
quantities of ice or frost were present on the LO2 and LH2 feedlines and
on the pressurization line brackets, and some frost or ice was present
along the LH2 PAL ramps.  These observations are acceptable per NSTS
08303.  The Ice/Frost "Red Team" reported that there were no anomalous TPS
conditions. 
 
The ET pressurization system functioned properly throughout engine start
and flight.  The minimum LO2 ullage pressure experienced during the ullage
pressure slump was 13.4 psid.  ET separation was confirmed, and since Main
Engine Cutoff (MECO) occurred within expected tolerances, ET reentry and
breakup is expected to be within the predicted footprint. 
 
 
2.3   SPACE SHUTTLE MAIN ENGINE - SSMEs 2012, 2026, 2032
 
All SSME parameters appeared to be normal throughout the prelaunch
countdown and were typical of prelaunch parameters observed on previous
flights.  Engine "Ready" was achieved at the proper time; all LCC were
met; and engine start and thrust buildup were normal. 
 
Preliminary flight data indicate that SSME performance during mainstage,
throttling, shutdown and propellant dump operations was normal.  HPOTP and
HPFTP temperatures appeared to be well within specification throughout
engine operation.  Space Shuttle Main Engine Cutoff (MECO) occurred at T +
512.6 seconds.  There were no Failure IDs (FIDs), and no significant SSME
problems have been identified. 
 
 
2.4   MAIN PROPULSION SYSTEM - MPS OV-104
 
The overall performance of the Main Propulsion System (MPS) was as
expected.  LH2 loading was performed as planned with no stop flows or
reverts.  LOX loading experienced a stop flow due to the failure of the
primary facility LOX pump.  The failure was caused by an overvoltage and
was for 7 minutes until the backup pump was brought on-line.  There were no
OMRSD or LCC violations. 
 
Throughout the period of preflight operations, no significant hazardous
gas concentrations were detected.  The maximum hydrogen concentration level
in the Orbiter aft compartment (which occurred shortly after the start of
fastfill) was approximately 160 ppm, which compares favorably with
previous data for this vehicle. 
 
A comparison of the calculated propellant loads at the end of replenish,
versus the inventory loads, results in a loading accuracy of 0.0095
percent for LH2, and 0.00072 percent for LO2.  Ascent MPS performance
appeared to be completely normal.  Preliminary data indicate that the LO2
and LH2 pressurization systems performed as planned, and that all NPSP
requirements were met throughout the flight. 
 
 
2.5   SHUTTLE RANGE SAFETY SYSTEM - SRSS
 
Shuttle Range Safety System (SRSS) closed loop testing was completed as
scheduled during the launch countdown.  All SRSS Safe and Arm (S&A)
devices were armed and system inhibits turned off at the appropriate
times.  All SRSS measurements indicated that the system operated as
expected throughout the countdown and flight. 
 
As planned, the SRB S&A devices were safed, and SRB system power was
turned off prior to SRB separation.  The ET system remained active until ET
separation from the Orbiter. 
 
 
2.6   VEHICLE PERFORMANCE
 
A quick-look determination of vehicle performance was made using vehicle 
acceleration and preflight propulsion prediction data.  From these data,
the average flight derived engine Isp determined for the time period
between SRB separation and start of 3-G throttling was 452.29 seconds as
compared to an MPS tag value of 452.70 seconds. 
 
 
 
3.0   CANDIDATE IN-FLIGHT ANOMALIES AND SIGNIFICANT PROBLEMS
 
No In-Flight Anomalies or significant problems associated with the MSFC
elements have been identified at this time. 
 

943.24Saw them!skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHERMinister of Acronyms, Holder of Past Knowledge, DNRCFri Nov 17 1995 11:5127
I set the alarm and got out this morning to see the Mir/Atlantis combo
flying over (well, south of) Nashua.  I spotted it about two minutes after
the predicted time, but almost exactly in the predicted location.  However,
I think the predictions from STS-Plus are for line-of-sight and don't take
the sun into account, so I may have seen it as soon as it emerged into the
Sun.

I was a nice long pass even though it did not get very high.  It appeared
to cruise along the treetops in the park across from my house.  It was not
as bright as I had expected--perhaps the same brightness as the stars in
Ursa Major (I don't know magnitudes very well).  However, it also did not
change brightness very much as it went along.

Incidentally, I got the TLEs for Mir from Kelso's ftp site, but they were
dated Nov 9th.  There are no new updates coming because of the govt
shutdown.  However, I as I was running the STS program with them I also
went to the NASA site and watched the "real-time data" page.  The altitude
and lat/lon were very consistent (within one degree and one km).

Fun!

Tomorrow there will be a very high pass, but it is a bit past 6AM, so there
will likely be too much sun, plus the weather prediction is not so good. 
Too bad, because it would be a good time to see Atlantis and Mir following
one another.

Burns
943.25Saw it too from the warmth of my living room bay windowNETCAD::BATTERSBYFri Nov 17 1995 14:4516
943.26Mission Control Status Report #1ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:0736
    Mission Control Status Report #1 
           STS-74
    
    Sunday, November 12, 1995   11 a.m. CST
    
    The Space Shuttle Atlantis launched on time at 6:31 a.m. CST Sunday 
    marking the beginning of a mission in which the shuttle will rendezvous
    with  Russia's Space Station Mir and deliver a permanent docking port
    that will be  used during future shuttle flights to Mir.
    
    About 43 minutes after launch, a two minute and 13 second engine firing 
    changed the shuttle's path into a 162 nautical mile circular orbit.
    Once on  orbit, the five crew members began configuring Atlantis for
    on-orbit  operations. Atlantis' payload bay doors were opened about 90
    minutes into  the flight, followed by a "go" for on-orbit operations.
    
    STS-74 Commander Ken Cameron and Pilot Jim Halsell, about three hours 
    into the last flight of the year, fired the orbiter's reaction control
    jets in the  first of a series of rendezvous burns that refined
    Atlantis' path to Mir.  Shortly after that jet firing, the first
    Canadian mission specialist, Chris  Hadfield, activated the Russian
    built docking module and its systems. The  docking module is housed in
    Atlantis' payload bay. Hadfield will use the  orbiter's robot arm early
    Tuesday to mate the docking module with the  Atlantis' Orbiter Docking
    System prior to the orbiter's link-up with Mir early  Wednesday. The
    docking is scheduled for 12:28 a.m. CST Wednesday.
    
    All systems aboard Atlantis are performing well.
    
    Crew members - Cameron, Halsell, and mission specialists Chris
    Hadfield,  Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur - will begin their sleep period
    at 12:31 p.m.  CST today and awaken at 8:31 p.m. CST today.
    
    The JSC Newsroom will close at noon CST today and reopen at 12:30 a.m. 
    Monday.
    
943.27Mission Control Status Report #2ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:0839
    Mission Control Status Report #2 
           STS-74
    
    Sunday, November 12, 1995   5 p.m. CST
    
    Five astronauts continue to rest aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis,
    awaiting an 8:31 p.m. CST wake-up call that will start their first full
    day of work delivering a permanent shuttle docking port to the Russian
    Mir Space Station.
    
    Activities for the coming day will focus on preparing to connect the
    Russian Docking Module to the shuttle airlock and getting Mission
    Specialists Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur ready for a contingency space
    walk should anything unexpected happen during Tuesday's move of the
    docking module.
    
    Maneuvers continuing the process of the shuttle rendezvous with
    Russia's Space Station Mir will resume at 10:11 p.m. CST when Commander
    Ken Cameron and Pilot Jim Halsell kick off the NC 2 burn. The NC 3 burn
    will occur at 10:09 a.m. CST Monday. Docking is scheduled for 12:28
    a.m. CST Wednesday.
    
    Mission Specialist Chris Hadfield will test the robot arm that will
    lift the module out of its payload bay moorings. With the help of
    Mission Specialist Bill McArthur, Hadfield also will power up and check
    the Orbiter Space Vision system that will be used to precisely align
    the robot arm. Cameron will set up the VHF radio gear that will be used
    for shuttle/Mir communications during the rendezvous.
    
    Ross and McArthur will inspect their space suits and pre-breath pure
    oxygen for an hour and a half to purge nitrogen bubbles from their
    bodies and prevent a condition known as "the bends" should a space walk
    be necessary. The pair is not expected to don the space suits unless a
    space walk is required.
    
    The STS-74 crew also is scheduled to be interviewed by the Canadian
    news media beginning at 6:31 a.m. CST.
    
    
943.28Mission Control Status Report #3ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:1050
    Mission Control Status Report #3 
    STS-74 
    
    Monday, November 12, 1995  5a.m. CST
    
    The five member crew aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis spent the bulk
    of its second day in space readying the orbiter and its payloads for
    Tuesday's mating of the Russian Docking Module to the Orbiter Docking
    System in advance of Wednesday's docking to Russia's Space Station Mir.
    Both the module and the docking system are located in Atlantis' payload
    bay. 
    
    Mission specialists Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur early Monday inspected
    the space suits they would don should a space walk become necessary
    during Tuesday's mating operation or the actual linkup of Atlantis to
    Mir at 12:28 a.m. Wednesday.
    
    Following the space suit inspection, Mission Specialist Chris Hadfield
    powered up the orbiter's robot arm which he will use Tuesday to move
    the docking module over to the docking system.  All systems affiliated
    with the robot arm operated as expected and are ready to support
    Tuesday's activities.
    
    Crew members also checked out the Orbiter Space Vision System, a
    precise alignment system for the robot arm that is being tested on
    STS-74.  The OSVS, which will be used during Tuesday's mating
    operation, consists of a series of large dots placed on the exterior of
    the docking module and the  docking system.
    
    Today's schedule also included the installation and alignment of the
    centerline camera in the center of the Orbiter Docking System.  The
    camera will assist Commander Ken Cameron in final piloting tasks as
    Atlantis moves into and docks with Russia's Space Station Mir. 
    Additionally,  Atlantis' jets will be fired to further refine the
    closing rate between the orbiter and Mir.  At 5 a.m. CST, Atlantis was
    about 4,000 statute miles behind Mir, and was closing in to the space
    station at a rate of about 380 statute miles per orbit.
    
    This morning, Cameron, Hadfield and other available crew members
    answered questions posed by Canadian reporters who are in Montreal and
    Toronto.   Hadfield is a Canadian Space Agency astronaut and the fourth
    Canadian astronaut to fly on the shuttle.
    
    NASA Television programming today includes the mission status briefing
    at 9 a.m. CST and Mission Update at 11 a.m.  Crew members will begin
    their sleep period at 12:31 p.m.   They will awaken at 8:31 p.m. today
    to begin a  busy day of mating operations between the docking module
    and the Orbiter Docking System.
    
    
943.29Mission Control Status Report #4ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:1146
    Mission Control Status Report #4 
    STS-74
    
    Monday, November 13, 1995  6 p.m. CST
    
    With all of the systems that will be used to put the Russian Docking
    Module in  place for a Wednesday link-up with the Mir Space Station
    checked out and  ready to go, the STS-74 crew settled down for 8 hours
    of sleep Monday  afternoon.
    
    Atlantis, orbiting flawlessly 238 miles above the Earth, is about 2,000
    miles  away from Mir and catching up at 135 miles per orbit.
    
    Earlier in the day, Commander Ken Cameron, Pilot Jim Halsell and
    Mission  Specialists Chris Hadfield, Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur
    checked out the  docking module, the Orbiter Docking System, the
    shuttle's robot arm and the  Orbiter Space Vision System and found all
    to be in good working order.  Ross  and McArthur also inspected the
    space suits they will don should a space walk  become necessary during
    Tuesday's mating operation or the actual linkup of  Atlantis to Mir.
    
    After an 8:31 p.m. CST wake-up call, Atlantis' astronauts will begin
    the  process of moving the docking module.  At 11:31 p.m., Hadfield
    will power up  the Orbiter Space Visions System.  At 11:46 p.m.,
    Hadfield and McArthur will  grapple the module with the robot arm.  At
    12:21 a.m. Tuesday, the pair will  remove the module from its payload
    bay moorings and Cameron and Halsell will  prepare the Orbiter Docking
    System for connection to the docking module.  At  12:56 a.m., Hadfield
    and McArthur will use the robot arm to move the docking  module over
    the Orbiter Docking System, then place the arm in a "limp" mode  with
    the docking module and Orbiter Docking System just four inches apart.  
    Cameron will fire Atlantis' steering jets, forcing the hooks and
    latches to  engage and locking the Russian Docking Module in place. 
    Hadfield and Ross will  then test the mated Russian docking module's
    systems.
    
    After a rendezvous burn of the shuttle's steering jets at 2:16 a.m.,
    the crew  will continue work to configure the docking module systems
    for Wednesday's  docking with the Russian space station.  Another
    firing of the shuttle's  thrusters is scheduled for 10:20 a.m.
    
    The astronauts will end their day at 12:31 p.m. Tuesday, beginning a
    six-hour  sleep shift that will synchronize their sleep cycle with that
    of the Mir 20  cosmonauts.
    
    
943.30Mission Control Status Report #5ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:1352
    Mission Control Status Report #5
    STS-74
    
    Tuesday, November 14, 1 995    5 a.m. CST
    STS-74 crew members early Tuesday successfully mated a 15-foot, Russian 
    built docking module from the Space Shuttle AtlantisU payload bay to
    the  shuttleUs Orbiter Docking System.  The mating operation went by
    the book with  no problems reported.
    
    Chris Hadfield, a Canadian Space Agency astronaut and STS-74 mission 
    specialist, used the shuttleUs robot arm to hoist the docking module
    out of the  aft portion of the payload bay, rotated it to a vertical
    position, and moved it  to within five inches of the Orbiter Docking
    System.  At that point, the  shuttle fired its downward steering jets
    and moved the shuttle toward the  docking module.  Once the two
    spacecraft were locked together, the docking ring  on the Orbiter
    Docking System retracted, and a series of hooks and latches were 
    engaged insuring an airtight seal between the two spacecraft.
    
    The mating was confirmed at 1:17 a.m. CST with Atlantis was over the
    eastern  portion of Europe on its 30th orbit.  Shortly after the
    capture, Commander Ken  Cameron expressed the crews appreciation for
    the training that prepared them  for the docking module installation.
    
    At about 3 a.m. CST, the crew received a go from ground flight
    controllers to  ungrapple the robot arm from the docking module. 
    Shortly after that, crew  members raised the orbiterUs cabin pressure
    from 10.2 pounds per square inch  to 14.7 psi.  The cabinUs pressure
    was lowered in the event that a problem  during the mating process
    neccessitated an emergency spacewalk.
    
    Crew members also mounted a centerline camera into the top hatch of the 
    docking module.  The camera will provide the primary visual cue for
    Cameron as  he maneuvers Atlantis to its docking with RussiaUs Space
    Station Mir early  Wednesday.
    
    Atlantis is trailing Mir by about 1450 statute miles and is closing at
    a rate  of about 180 statute miles every orbit.  A series of rendezvous
    jet firings  will further refine the closing rate, leading up to a
    docking with Mir at 12:27  a.m. CST Wednesday.
    
    The crew is scheduled to begin a shortened sleep period at 12:31 p.m.
    today and will be awakened at 6:31 p.m. today.  Flight controllers are
    working toward an earlier start to the crews sleep period to enable the
    astronauts to get additional rest time in advance of tomorrowUs
    docking.
    
    Because of the federal government furlough situation, it is likely that
    the JSC Newsroom will close about 10 a.m. CST today and reopen when the
    furlough is lifted.
    
    
943.31Mission Control Status Report #6ERMTRD::CLIFFEI'll warp my own space-time ...Wed Nov 22 1995 06:1443
    Mission Control Status Report #6
    STS-74
    Monday, November 20, 1 995  5 a.m. CST
    
    Fresh from a successful docking with the Russian Mir Space Station,
    the Space Shuttle Atlantis and its crew are primed for landing today
    at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
    
    Commander Ken Cameron, Pilot Jim Halsell and Mission Specialists Chris
    Hadfield, Jerry Ross and Bill McArthur are conducting the final checks
    of the shuttle's steering systems this morning and watching Florida
    weather, which is forecast to be favorable. Today's first landing
    opportunity begins with a deorbit burn at 9:58 a.m. JSC time and
    concludes with landing at 11:02 a.m. The second opportunity involves a
    deorbit burn at 11:33 a.m. and landing at 12:37 p.m.
    
    Although weather is expected to be good at Edwards Air Force Base in
    California, landing support teams have not been activated there. If
    landing does not occur at KSC today, there are opportunities at both
    sites Tuesday.
    
    Because the astronauts awakened about 12:30 a.m. today and will land
    around midday, they are expected to remain in Florida overnight. A
    welcome home ceremony is being planned for 11 a.m. Tuesday at
    Ellington Field's Hangar 990.
    
    Atlantis' return to Earth follows a successful docking with Mir and
    delivery of the Russian Docking Module that now becomes a permanent
    docking port for future Phase 1 missions to the space station. The
    STS-74 crew also participated in a number of joint medical and
    environmental investigations with the Mir crew -- Commander Yuri
    Gidzenko, Flight Engineer Sergei Avdeyev and Cosmonaut Researcher
    Thomas Reiter of Germany. Atlantis delivered water, supplies and
    equipment--including two new solar arrays--to Mir and is returning
    with U.S., Russian and ESA experiment equipment and samples.
    
    The astronauts of the second shuttle-Mir docking flight also studied
    the Earth's thermosphere, ionosphere and mesosphere with the GLO-4
    experiment, and evaluated Mir's solar array structures remotely
    through three Photogrammetric Appendage Structural Dynamics Experiment
    canisters in the payload bay.