NASA starts simulations of shuttle mission

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Space.com: NASA flight controllers, astronauts and engineers perform the first of many full-scale simulations for the agency's return-to-flight mission.
NASA

NASA flight controllers, astronauts and engineers have reached one step closer to returning to space agency's shuttle program to launch status, performing the first of many full-scale simulations for its first return-to-flight mission.

With their feet planted firmly at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, flight controllers and the astronaut crew for the Discovery STS-114 mission conducted an eight-hour simulation of the shuttle's rendezvous and docking with the international space station.

Space station astronauts also participated in the docking dress rehearsal, which included a run-through of the new shuttle pitch maneuver that will give the space station's cameras and crew a good view of Discovery's belly-mounted ceramic heat tiles. That roll maneuver adds about 20 minutes to the already-lengthy docking process, but will likely become standard procedure for future missions to the space station, NASA officials said.

"For me, this is the light at the end of the tunnel," Paul Hill, lead flight director at Johnson Space Center, told Space.com. "We have spent a lot of effort investigating the [Columbia] accident and doing the engineering work to change how we're going to fly."

NASA's three remaining space shuttles have been grounded since the loss of Columbia and its seven-astronaut crew during re-entry on Feb. 1, 2003. The leading edge of the shuttle's left wing was damaged during launch, and its crew was unable to survey the damage up close while in orbit.

But NASA engineers are working to change that. During Discovery's station docking simulation, its astronaut crew, space station counterparts and ground flight controllers went through a series of flight maneuvers — in addition to rendezvous pitch — designed to survey NASA orbiters in flight. A second dress rehearsal planned for this week includes using an orbital boom, still under development by NASA engineers, that will allow Discovery’s crew to look up close at the shuttle’s wing leading edges and nose cap.

"The fact that we're able to do these simulations now shows that many of the milestones for return to flight have been completed," said STS-114 mission specialist Andrew Thomas. "We're getting the rhythm of flying the shuttle again, and that's kind of a nice feeling to have."

Last Wednesday's full-scale simulation began on Day 3 of Discovery's STS-114 flight plan, starting just after the wake-up call for mission commander Eileen Collins and her crew. The mock shuttle-station mission ran through the Day 3 timeline until about an hour after the station docking.

"This integrated simulation is a huge milestone for the crew," Collins said. "The crew is ready to go, the flight control team is ready to go, and we're especially looking forward to the rendezvous pitch maneuver — something that's never been done before."

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