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STS-53

1992 American crewed spaceflight for the Department of Defense


Summary

1992 American crewed spaceflight for the Department of Defense

FieldValue
nameSTS-53
names_listSpace Transportation System-53
imageSTS-053 shuttle.jpg
image_captionLaunch of Discovery for a Department of Defense (DoD) mission
mission_typeDoD satellite deployment
operatorNASA
mission_duration
distance_travelled3,034,680 mi
orbits_completed116
spacecraft
launch_mass110655 kg
landing_mass87565 kg
payload_mass11860 kg
crew_size5
crew_members
launch_dateUTC (8:24amEST)
launch_siteKennedy, LC-39A
launch_contractorRockwell International
landing_dateUTC (12:43:47pmPST)
landing_siteEdwards, Runway22
orbit_referenceGeocentric orbit
orbit_regimeLow Earth orbit
orbit_periapsis365 km
orbit_apoapsis376 km
orbit_inclination57.00°
orbit_period92.00 minutes
apsisgee
instruments
insigniaSTS-53 patch.svg
insignia_captionSTS-53 mission patch
crew_photoSts-53_crew.jpg
crew_photo_captionBack: Walker, Cabana and Clifford
Front: Bluford and Voss
programmeSpace Shuttle program
previous_missionSTS-52
next_missionSTS-54

Front: Bluford and Voss

STS-53 was a NASA Space Shuttle Discovery mission in support of the United States Department of Defense (DoD). It was Discovery's 15th flight. The mission was launched on December 2, 1992, from Kennedy Space Center, Florida. This was also the last mission to have been operated via MCR-2 in JSC. Afterwards the room was restored entirely to its Apollo era appearance.

Crew

Flight Engineer

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.
Walker
Cabana
BlufordClifford
Voss
CliffordBluford
Unused
Unused

Mission highlights

Discovery carried a classified primary payload (DOD-1) for the United States Department of Defense (DoD), two unclassified secondary payloads and nine unclassified middeck experiments.

Discoverys primary payload, USA-89 (1992-086B) is also known as "DoD-1", and was the shuttle's last major payload for the Department of Defense. The satellite was the third launch of a Satellite Data System-2 (SDS 2-3) military communications satellite, after USA-40 on STS-28 and STS-38's deployment of USA-67.

Secondary payloads contained in or attached to Get Away Special (GAS) hardware in the cargo bay included the Orbital Debris Radar Calibration Spheres (ODERACS) satellites and the combined Shuttle Glow Experiment/Cryogenic Heat Pipe Experiment (GCP).

Middeck experiments included Microcapsules in Space (MIS-l); Space Tissue Loss (STL); Visual Function Tester (VFT-2); Cosmic Radiation Effects and Activation Monitor (CREAM); Radiation Monitoring Equipment (RME-III); Fluid Acquisition and Resupply Experiment (FARE); Hand-held, Earth-oriented, Real-time, Cooperative, User-friendly, Location-targeting and Environmental System (HERCULES); Battlefield Laser Acquisition Sensor Test (BLAST); and the Cloud Logic to Optimize Use of Defense Systems (CLOUDS).

Mission insignia

The five sides represent the Pentagon, the Department of Defense headquarters. The five stars and three stripes of the insignia symbolize the flight's numerical designation in the Space Transportation System's mission sequence.

References

References

  1. "STS-53". Spacefacts.
  2. (June 29, 2001). "STS-53 (52)". NASA.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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