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MULTI AERIAL TESTING MACHINE - CONSOLE - FIXTURES

STS086-390-031 - STS-086 - Survey views of the Mir space station

Photo by Dunn Camera System CGI: Space Shuttle Ascent mode results ARC-1989-AC89-0065-13

A SABB and Mast Canister for the P6 Truss taken during STS-100

S122E009328 - STS-122 - Survey Views of ISS during Expedition 16/STS-122 Joint Operations

New York City, [shortly before 10th anniversary of] September 11, 2001 terrorist attack: [site of the World Trade Center bombing; memorial to victims; surrounding environment; and urban vistas]

STS074-320-027 - STS-074 - View of the exterior of the aft flight deck of Atlantis from Mir

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Photographers are in position beside the towway to capture space shuttle Discovery and the landing convoy on its slow trip from the Shuttle Landing Facility to Orbiter Processing Facility-2 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. A purge unit that pumps conditioned air into a shuttle after landing is connected to Discovery's aft end. In the background at left is the 525-foot-tall Vehicle Assembly Building. Discovery touched down on Runway 15 at 11:57 a.m., bringing an end to its 39th and final spaceflight mission, STS-133. Discovery and its six-member STS-133 crew delivered the Permanent Multipurpose Module, packed with supplies and critical spare parts, as well as Robonaut 2, the dexterous humanoid astronaut helper, to the International Space Station. Inside the processing facility, Discovery will be prepared for future public display. Photo credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller KSC-2011-2159

Various views of the module in the ISS stack

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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - The STS-112 crew looks over equipment in the Space Station Processing Facility as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test. From left are a technician, Mission Specialist Sandra Magnus, Pilot Pamela Melroy, Mission Specialists David Wolf (seated), Fyodor Yurchikhin and Piers Sellers, and Commander Jeffrey Ashby (in front). Yurchikhin is with the Russian Space Agency. Mission STS-112 will be ferrying the S1 ITS to the International Space Station on its scheduled Aug. 22 flight. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss KSC-02pd0980

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- The STS-112 crew looks over equipment in the Space Station Processing Facility as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test. From left are Pilot Pamela Melroy, Mission Specialists David Wolf (seated) and Piers Sellers, and Commander Jeffrey Ashby. Mission STS-112 will be ferrying the S1 ITS to the International Space Station on its scheduled Aug. 22 flight. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss KSC-02pd0981

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Space Station Processing Facility, as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test, the STS-112 crew get a different view of the mission payload. from underneath. Second from left is Mission Specialist David Wolf; at right are Mission Specialists Piers Sellers (front) and Fyodor Yurchikhin (back), who is with the Russian Space Agency. Mission STS-112 will be ferrying the S1 ITS to the International Space Station on its scheduled Aug. 22 flight. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss KSC-02pd0986

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- As part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test, members of the STS-112 crew look at the S1 Integrated Truss Structure, part of the payload for their mission to the International Space Station. From left are Pilot Pamela Melroy and Mission Specialists Piers Sellers and Sandra Magnus. At right, looking up, is Commander Jeffrey Ashby. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss. Launch of STS-112 is scheduled for Aug. 22, 2002 KSC-02pd0990

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - In the Space Station Processing Facility, STS-112 Pilot Pamela Melroy (standing) and Mission Specialist David Wolf (in front) look over the payload for their mission as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test. Mission STS-112 will be ferrying the S1 ITS to the International Space Station on its scheduled Aug. 22 flight. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss KSC-02pd0982

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- As part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test, STS-112 Mission Specialist Piers Sellers (foreground) and Commander Jeffrey Ashby look over the payload for the mission in the Space Station Processing Facility. Mission STS-112 will be ferrying the S1 ITS to the International Space Station on its scheduled Aug. 22 flight. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss KSC-02pd0985

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- STS-112 Mission Specialist David Wolf (right) and Pilot Pamela Melroy (left) look at equipment in the payload bay of Atlantis during a Crew Equipment Interface Test at KSC. In the background, right, is Commander Jeffrey Ashby. STS-112 is the 15th assembly flight to the International Space Station and will be ferrying the S1 Integrated Truss Structure. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss. STS-112 is currently scheduled for launch Aug. 22, 2002 KSC-02PD1070

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - The crew for mission STS-121 is taking part in a Crew Equipment Interface Test (CEIT) inside the Space Station Processing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center. Standing in front of a work stand are, left to right, Mission Specialists Thomas Reiter and Lisa Nowak, Mission Commander Steven Lindsey, Mission Specialist Michael Fossum, Pilot Mark Kelly, and Mission Specialists Stephanie Wilson and Piers Sellers. Reiter represents the European Space Agency (ESA) and will remain on the space station working with the station crew under a contract between ESA and the Russian Federal Space Agency. He will return to Earth aboard STS-116 or a Russian Soyuz. A CEIT provides hands-on experiences with equipment used on-orbit. Mission STS-121 is the second in the Return to Flight sequence and will carry on improvements that debuted during last year's STS-114 mission and build upon those tests. Launch is scheduled in July. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-06pd0533

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Space Station Processing Facility, as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test, STS-112 Commander Jeffrey Ashby looks over the S1 Integrated Truss Structure, part of the payload for the mission to the International Space Station. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Space Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss. Launch of STS-112 is scheduled for Aug. 22, 2002 KSC-02pd0989

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- The STS-112 crew gathers in front of structures in the Space Station Processing Facility where they have been looking over part of the payload as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test activities. From left are Commander Jeffrey Ashby, Pilot Pamela Melroy and Mission Specialists Sandra Magnus, David Wolf, Piers Sellers and Fyodor Yurchikhin, who is with the Russian Space Agency. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment for the International Space Station, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss. Launch of STS-112 is scheduled for Aug. 22, 2002 KSC-02pd0993

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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- The STS-112 crew gathers in front of structures in the Space Station Processing Facility where they have been looking over part of the payload as part of the Crew Equipment Interface Test activities. From left are Commander Jeffrey Ashby, Pilot Pamela Melroy and Mission Specialists Sandra Magnus, David Wolf, Piers Sellers and Fyodor Yurchikhin, who is with the Russian Space Agency. The S1 truss is the first starboard (right-side) truss segment for the International Space Station, whose main job is providing structural support for the orbiting research facility's radiator panels that cool the Station's complex power system. The S1 truss segment also will house communications systems, external experiment positions and other subsystems. The S1 truss will be attached to the S0 truss. Launch of STS-112 is scheduled for Aug. 22, 2002

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kennedy space center sts crew structures payload equipment interface activities crew equipment interface test activities commander ashby commander jeffrey ashby pilot pamela melroy pilot pamela melroy specialists sandra magnus mission specialists sandra magnus david wolf david wolf piers sellers piers sellers fyodor yurchikhin fyodor yurchikhin russian russian space agency truss right side segment truss segment international space station job support research research facility radiator panels radiator panels system power system communications house communications systems experiment positions experiment positions subsystems launch high resolution space module nasa power house
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Date

15/06/2002
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NASA
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https://images.nasa.gov/
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Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore House Communications Systems, Experiment Positions, Commander Jeffrey Ashby

S132E010087 - STS-132 - Sellers floats into the Node 1 during Joint Operations

STS092-353-007 - STS-092 - STS-92 crew portrait in the ISS Node 1/Unity module

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - In the Orbiter Processing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, STS-115 crew members inspect equipment in Atlantis's payload bay. The crew is at KSC for Crew Equipment Interface Test activities, which involves equipment familiarization, a routine part of astronaut training and launch preparations. The STS-115 mission will deliver the second port truss segment, the P3/P4 truss, to the International Space Station. The crew will attach the P3 to the first port truss segment, the P1 truss, as well as deploy solar array set 2A and 4A. Launch on Space Shuttle Atlantis is scheduled for late August. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-06pd1205

STS058-204-010 - STS-058 - Crewmembers in the SPACELAB setting up the exerciser expelled gas analyzer.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – At NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Kennedy Director Bob Cabana, left, congratulates, Eric Silagy, Florida Power & Light Company vice president and chief development officer, for his part in the construction of NASA's first large-scale solar power generation facility as Roderick Roche, senior manager, Project Management Office of North America, SunPower Corporation, looks on. Representatives from NASA, Florida Power & Light Company, or FPL, and SunPower Corporation formally commissioned the one-megawatt facility and announced plans to pursue a new research, development and demonstration project at Kennedy to advance America's use of renewable energy. The facility is the first element of a major renewable energy project currently under construction at Kennedy. The completed system features a fixed-tilt, ground-mounted solar power system designed and built by SunPower, along with SunPower solar panels. A 10-megawatt solar farm, which SunPower is building on nearby Kennedy property, will supply power to FPL's customers when it is completed in April 2010. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann KSC-2009-6456

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- At the KSC Shuttle Landing Facility, the Joint Airlock Module, the gateway from which crew members aboard the International Space Station (ISS) will enter and exit the 470-ton orbiting research facility, is settled onto a flatbed trailer for transport to the Operations and Checkout Building in the KSC industrial area. There it will undergo vacuum chamber testing. It will then be moved to the Space Station Processing Facility (SSPF) for further prelaunch preparation and checkout. The massive, spindle-shaped airlock is 20 feet long, has a diameter of 13 feet at its widest point, and weighs six and a half tons. It was manufactured at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center by the Huntsville division of The Boeing Company. The Space Shuttle Atlantis will carry the airlock to orbit on mission STS-104, the tenth International Space Station flight, currently targeted for liftoff in May 2001 KSC00pp1348

STS092-304-027 - STS-092 - Various portrait views of crew during de-orbit prep

S135E007144 - STS-135 - Magnus and Walheim on Atlantis Aft Flight Deck during Rendezvous OPS

STS112-349-016 - STS-112 - STS-112 crewmembers on middeck with stowage bags

STS112-336-014 - STS-112 - STS-112 MS Wolf and PLT Melroy in Quest airlock prior to EVA 2

STS112-304-004 - STS-112 - CDR Ashby , PLT Melroy and MS Yurchikhin at aft flight deck window

STS112-336-035 - STS-112 - STS-112 MS Wolf and PLT Melroy in Quest airlock prior to EVA 2

Topics

kennedy space center sts crew structures payload equipment interface activities crew equipment interface test activities commander ashby commander jeffrey ashby pilot pamela melroy pilot pamela melroy specialists sandra magnus mission specialists sandra magnus david wolf david wolf piers sellers piers sellers fyodor yurchikhin fyodor yurchikhin russian russian space agency truss right side segment truss segment international space station job support research research facility radiator panels radiator panels system power system communications house communications systems experiment positions experiment positions subsystems launch high resolution space module nasa power house