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Shuttle Tile Inspection Clears Endeavour For Return To Earth

Mission Specialists Drew Feustel (top) and Mike Fincke conduct the second spacewalk of the STS-134 mission. Photo credit: NASA TV.
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) May 23, 2011
Mission managers cleared Endeavour's thermal protection system for re-entry after analysis of data and images from an early-morning focused robotic inspection of the tiles.

A conversation with the pope, the focused inspection and spacewalk preparation highlighted Saturday events aboard the shuttle and the International Space Station.

Endeavour crew members, Commander Mark Kelly, Pilot Greg H. Johnson and Mission Specialists Mike Fincke, Roberto Vittori, Andrew Feustel and Greg Chamitoff gathered in the station's Kibo module with the Expedition 27 station crew, Commander Dmitry Kondratyev and Flight Engineers Paolo Nespoli, Cady Coleman, Andrey Borisenko, Alexander Samokutyaev and Ron Garan for the conversation with Pope Benedict XVI at 6:11 a.m. CDT.

The pope, introduced to the crew by Thomas Reiter, astronaut and director of European Space Agency human spaceflight operations, asked the crews about their views of and thoughts about the Earth. He also asked about what messages they would bring back to Earth from space and what they reflect on in space.

The focused inspection began at 2:35 a.m. Using the shuttle's Canadarm and the Orbiter Boom Sensor System, Johnson, Fincke and Vittori took a closer look at an area of interest between the right landing gear door and the external tank disconnect door.

They took detailed images and three-dimensional scans of that area during the inspection, which concluded about 3:30 a.m. The data and images were sent down for analysis by experts on the ground.

Sunday's spacewalk by Feustel and Fincke includes a variety of tasks, including topping off ammonia in a cooling loop, lubricating the port Solar Alpha Rotary Joint, and working with the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator (Dextre) to install a camera cover and lubricate a latching end effector.

Feustel, Fincke and Chamitoff worked for about two hours to configure spacewalking tools. Near the end of their day all crew members gathered for a spacewalk procedure review. Feustel and Fincke were spending the night in the reduced pressure of the station's Quest airlock to lower the nitrogen content of their blood and reduce the possibility of nitrogen narcosis in the low pressure of the spacesuits.



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SHUTTLE NEWS
ISS astronauts inspect tile damage, chat with pope
Washington (AFP) May 21, 2011
Astronauts completed an inspection of the heat shield tiles on the underbelly of the space shuttle Endeavour Saturday after a first-ever papal video call to space from Pope Pope Benedict XVI. Mission managers "cleared Endeavour's thermal protection system for reentry after analysis of data and images from an early-morning focused robotic inspection of the tiles," a NASA update said. "Ul ... read more







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