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Aviation Machinist's Mate Airman Justin Nabors cleans

STS-129 - LAUNCH - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - In Orbiter Processing Facility bay 3, STS-120 Mission Specialists Scott E. Parazynski and Paolo A. Nespoli (foreground) inspect tools they will use during the mission. Nespoli is a European Space Agency astronaut from Italy. Behind them are Mission Specialist Douglas H. Wheelock and Allison Bolinger, an EVA technician with NASA. The STS-120 crew is at Kennedy for a crew equipment interface test, or CEIT, which includes harness training, inspection of the thermal protection system and camera operation for planned extravehicular activities, or EVAs. The STS-120 mission will deliver the Harmony module, christened after a school contest, which will provide attachment points for European and Japanese laboratory modules on the International Space Station. Known in technical circles as Node 2, it is similar to the six-sided Unity module that links the U.S. and Russian sections of the station. Built in Italy for the United States, Harmony will be the first new U.S. pressurized component to be added. The STS-120 mission is targeted to launch on Oct. 20. Photo credit: NASA/George Shelton KSC-07pd2207

STS-131 Hatch Opening. NASA public domain image colelction.

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- At SPACEHAB, in Cape Canaveral, Fla., members of the STS-101 crew take part in Crew Equipment Interface Test (CEIT) activities, learning about some of the equipment they will be working with on their mission to the International Space Station. Looking over one of the elements are (left to right) Mission Specialists James Voss and Susan Helms, Pilot Scott Horowitz, and Mission Specialist Yuri Usachev of Russia. Seen behind Horowitz is Commander James Halsell. Also taking part in the CEIT are Mission Specialists Mary Ellen Weber and Jeffrey Williams. The STS-101 crew will be responsible for preparing the Space Station for the arrival of the Zvezda Service Module, expected to be launched by Russia in July 2000. Also, the crew will conduct one space walk to perform maintenance on the Space Station and deliver logistics and supplies. This will be the third assembly flight for the Space Station. STS-101 is scheduled to launch no earlier than April 13 from Launch Pad 39A KSC00pp0277

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - In Orbiter Processing Facility 3 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, members of space shuttle Discovery's STS-131 crew participate in training activities during the Crew Equipment Interface Test, or CEIT, for their mission. Here, from left in the blue flight suits, Mission Specialist Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger is instructed on the repair of the shuttle's thermal protection system tile as Mission Specialists Clay Anderson and Rick Mastracchio look on. The CEIT provides the crew with hands-on training and observation of shuttle and flight hardware. The seven-member crew will deliver the multi-purpose logistics module Leonardo, filled with resupply stowage platforms and racks to be transferred to locations around the International Space Station. Three spacewalks will include work to attach a spare ammonia tank assembly to the station's exterior and return a European experiment from outside the station's Columbus module. Discovery's launch is targeted for March 18. For information on the STS-131 mission and crew, visit http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/sts131/index.html. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-2010-1127

STS-130 - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Members of the STS-101 crew share a light moment during Crew Equipment Interface Test (CEIT) activities at SPACEHAB, in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Documenting the occasion is astronaut Marsha Ivins (far left, with camera). Standing behind her (left to right) are Mission Specialists Susan Helms, James Voss and Yuri Usachev; Commander James Halsell; and Mission Specialists Jeffrey Williams (holding tank) and Mary Ellen Weber. During a CEIT, a Shuttle crew becomes familiar with some of the equipment they will be working with on their mission. The STS-101 crew will be responsible for preparing the Space Station for the arrival of the Zvezda Service Module, expected to be launched by Russia in July 2000. Also, the crew will conduct one space walk to perform maintenance on the Space Station and deliver logistics and supplies. This will be the third assembly flight for the Space Station. STS-101 is scheduled to launch no earlier than April 13 from Launch Pad 39A KSC00pp0283

S36-21-021 - STS-036 - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

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S116E05575 - STS-116 - STS-116 MS Higginbotham uses laptop computer in the MDDK on Space Shuttle Discovery

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Description: View of Astronaut Joan E. Higginbotham, STS-116 Mission Specialist (MS), uses a laptop computer in the Middeck (MDDK) on Space Shuttle Discovery.

Subject Terms: STS-116, Discovery (Orbiter), Astronauts, Middeck, Computer Equipment

Date Taken: 12/11/2006

Categories: Flight Station

Interior_Exterior: Interior

Ground_Orbit: On-orbit

Element: Shuttle Middeck

Original: Digital Still

Preservation File Format: TIFF

STS-116

label_outline

Tags

higginbotham ms higginbotham laptop computer laptop computer mddk space shuttle discovery astronauts sts 116 discovery nasa high resolution space shuttle discovery sts 116 sts 116 ms higginbotham middeck sts 116 mission specialist tiff sts 116 shuttle middeck computer equipment astronaut joan preservation file format flight station space program
date_range

Date

2006
create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Sts 116 Ms Higginbotham, Astronaut Joan, Ms Higginbotham

Topics

higginbotham ms higginbotham laptop computer laptop computer mddk space shuttle discovery astronauts sts 116 discovery nasa high resolution space shuttle discovery sts 116 sts 116 ms higginbotham middeck sts 116 mission specialist tiff sts 116 shuttle middeck computer equipment astronaut joan preservation file format flight station space program