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STS-45

1992 American crewed spaceflight


1992 American crewed spaceflight

FieldValue
nameSTS-45
names_listSpace Transportation System-45
imageSTS-45 payload.jpg
image_captionComponents of the ATLAS-1 laboratory in the payload bay of Atlantis
mission_typeATLAS-1 astronomy research
operatorNASA
mission_duration
distance_travelled5211340 km
orbits_completed143
spacecraft
launch_mass105982 kg
landing_mass93009 kg
payload_mass9947 kg
crew_size7
crew_members
launch_dateUTC (8:13:39amEST)
launch_siteKennedy, LC-39A
launch_contractorRockwell International
landing_dateUTC (6:23:06amEST)
landing_siteKennedy, SLF Runway 33
orbit_referenceGeocentric orbit
orbit_regimeLow Earth orbit
orbit_periapsis282 km
orbit_apoapsis294 km
orbit_inclination57.00°
orbit_period90.30 minutes
apsisgee
instruments
insigniaSts-45-patch.png
insignia_captionSTS-45 mission patch
crew_photoSts-45 crew.jpg
crew_photo_captionStanding: Lichtenberg, Foale, Leestma, Sullivan and Frimout
Seated: Duffy and Bolden
programmeSpace Shuttle program
previous_missionSTS-42 (45)
next_missionSTS-49 (47)

Seated: Duffy and Bolden

STS-45 was a 1992 NASA Space Shuttle mission using the . Its almost nine-day scientific mission was with a non-deployable payload of instruments. It was the 46th Space Shuttle mission and the 11th for Atlantis.

Crew

Flight Engineer

The astronauts were divided into a red team and a blue team to allow around-the-clock monitoring of experiments.

Crew seat assignments

SeatLaunchLanding1234567
[[File:Space Shuttle seating plan.svg150px]]
Seats 1–4 are on the flight deck.
Seats 5–7 are on the mid-deck.
Bolden
Duffy
SullivanFoale
Leestma
FoaleSullivan
Frimout
Lichtenberg

Mission highlights

Atlantis was launched on March 24, 1992, at 8:13 a.m. EST. The launch was originally scheduled for March 23, 1992, but was delayed by one day because of higher-than-allowable concentrations of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen in the orbiter's aft compartment during tanking operations. During troubleshooting, the leaks could not be reproduced, leading engineers to believe that they were the result of plumbing in the main propulsion system not thermally conditioned to the cryogenic propellants; the launch was rescheduled for March 24, 1992. Atlantis weighed 105982 kg at launch.

STS-45 carried the first Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science (ATLAS-1) experiments, placed on Spacelab pallets mounted in the orbiter's payload bay. The non-deployable payload, equipped with 12 instruments from the United States, France, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Japan, conducted studies in atmospheric chemistry, solar radiation, space plasma physics and ultraviolet astronomy. ATLAS-1 instruments included the Atmospheric Trace Molecule Spectroscopy (ATMOS); Grille Spectrometer; Millimeter Wave Atmospheric Sounder (MAS); Imaging Spectrometric Observatory (ISO); Atmospheric Lyman-Alpha Emissions (ALAE); Atmospheric Emissions Photometric Imager (AEPI); Space Experiments with Particle Accelerators (SEPAC); Active Cavity Radiometer (ACR); Measurement of Solar Constant (SOLCON); Solar Spectrum; Solar Ultraviolet Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SUSIM); and Far Ultraviolet Space Telescope (FAUST). Other payloads included the Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet (SSBUV) experiment, a Get Away Special (GAS) experiment and six mid-deck experiments.

The mission was extended by a day in order to continue science experiments. The landing occurred on April 2, 1992, 6:23 a.m. EST, on Runway 33 of the Shuttle Landing Facility, located at the Kennedy Space Center. The rollout distance was 2812 m and Atlantis weighed 93005 kg on landing.

Mission insignia

The mission insignia covers all aspects of the flight, by featuring Earth and the Sun, and the orbiter on high inclination, as to illustrate the high importance of the mission. The names of all flying members are included in the band, separated by stars. In the 'ring' at the bottom right, a single star is included, separating the unmentioned names of the alternate mission specialists, who are therefore indirectly included; a first and unique tribute to a support crew. Dirk Frimout is the first Belgian citizen to fly into space, and the only one to fly on a Space Shuttle (the other is Frank De Winne (who flies to the International Space Station via Soyuz as mission commander), as the Space Shuttle program was terminated at the time of the latter's flight), but to keep the focus on the mission, no national flag is added nor the customary logo of the European Space Agency (ESA), but the mission main objective, ATLAS, is included below instead.

References

References

  1. "STS-45". Spacefacts.
  2. Dunn, Marcia. (1992-03-23). "Shuttle launch scrapped". The Free Lance-Star.
  3. Fricke, Robert W.. (1992-05-01). "STS-45 Space Shuttle mission report".
  4. (September 1, 2011). "Space Shuttle Missions Summary". NASA.
  5. "Background". Institut Pierre Simon Laplace.
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