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Payload Specialists Garneau and Scully-Power prepare to leave for KSC

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Summary

Payload Specialists Marc Garneau and Paul Scully-Power prepare to board the Shuttle Trainer aircraft to leave for the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) for the STS 41-G mission.

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aircraft payload specialists runways space shuttle mission 41 g johnson space center payload specialists garneau payload specialists garneau scully power high resolution payload specialists marc garneau ksc paul scully power shuttle trainer aircraft kennedy space center aviation nasa florida cape canaveral
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Date

01/10/1984
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Source

NASA
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Link

https://images.nasa.gov/
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Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Scully Power, Space Shuttle Mission 41 G, Paul Scully Power

STS073-101-017 - STS-073 - CGF, Payload Specialist Fred Leslie working in USML-2 Spacelab

STS073-145-027 - STS-073 - CGF, Payload Commander Kathy Thornton and Payload Specialist Al Sacco work in Spacelab

STS-85 Payload Commander N. Jan Davis gives a thumbs up as she is assisted with her ascent/reentry flight suit in the Operations and Checkout (O&C) Building. She has logged nearly 400 hours in space on the STS-47 and STS-60 missions and holds a doctorate in mechanical engineering. Davis will have overall responsibility for the experiments conducted on STS-85. She will also deploy and retrieve the Cryogenic Infrared Spectrometers and Telescopes for the AtmosphereShuttle Pallet Satellite-2 (CRISTA-SPAS-2) free-flyer and operate the prototype Japanese robotic arm. The primary payload aboard the Space Shuttle orbiter Discovery is the CRISTA-SPAS-2. Other payloads on the 11-day mission include the Manipulator Flight Demonstration (MFD), and Technology Applications and Science-1 (TAS-1) and International Extreme Ultraviolet Hitchhiker-2 (IEH-2) experiments KSC-97PC1199

STS51G-05-011 - STS-51G - STS-51G crew activities

STS083-346-031 - STS-083 - payload commander Voss flying into Spacelab

Payload Specialist Scully-Power in full flight suit with helmet

41G-18-006 - STS-41G - 41G crew activities

STS51G-108-034 - STS-51G - Baudry and Lucid participate in the French Echocardiograph Experiment (FEE)

STS094-470-011 - STS-094 - Crouch enters data into a PGSC on the middeck

STS097-316-002 - STS-097 - MS Garneau operates the RMS arm during the third EVA of STS-97

STS087-325-024 - STS-087 - Candid views of crewmember activity in the middeck

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- The Space Shuttle orbiter Discovery touches down in darkness on Runway 15 of the KSC Shuttle Landing Facility, bringing to a close the 10-day STS-82 mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Main gear touchdown was at 3:32:26 a.m. EST on February 21, 1997. It was the ninth nighttime landing in the history of the Shuttle program and the 35th landing at KSC. The first landing opportunity at KSC was waved off because of low clouds in the area. The seven-member crew performed a record-tying five back-to-back extravehicular activities (EVAs) or spacewalks to service the telescope, which has been in orbit for nearly seven years. Two new scientific instruments were installed, replacing two outdated instruments. Five spacewalks also were performed on the first servicing mission, STS-61, in December 1993. Only four spacewalks were scheduled for STS-82, but a fifth one was added during the flight to install several thermal blankets over some aging insulation covering three HST compartments containing key data processing, electronics and scientific instrument telemetry packages. Crew members are Mission Commander Kenneth D. Bowersox, Pilot Scott J. "Doc" Horowitz, Payload Commander Mark C. Lee, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, Gregory J. Harbaugh, Joseph R. "Joe" Tanner and Steven A. Hawley. STS-82 was the 82nd Space Shuttle flight and the second mission of 1997 KSC-97pc352

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aircraft payload specialists runways space shuttle mission 41 g johnson space center payload specialists garneau payload specialists garneau scully power high resolution payload specialists marc garneau ksc paul scully power shuttle trainer aircraft kennedy space center aviation nasa florida cape canaveral