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S134E007368 - STS-134 - View of AMS-2 stowed in the Endeavour Payload Bay

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Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Description: View of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer - 2 (AMS-2) stowed in the shuttle Endeavour Payload Bay. Photo taken through the window on a Middeck hatch.

Subject Terms: STS-134, Payloads, Bays (Structural Units), Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer

Date Taken: 5/19/2011

Categories: Station Configuration

Interior_Exterior: Exterior

Ground_Orbit: On-orbit

Element: Shuttle Payload Bay

Original: Digital Still

Preservation File Format: TIFF

STS-134

Nothing Found.

label_outline

Tags

ams endeavour space shuttle view sts 134 endeavour nasa payload bay high resolution ultra high resolution alpha magnetic spectrometer shuttle endeavour payload bay endeavour payload bay shuttle payload bay sts 134 view ams 2 tiff sts 134 payloads bays preservation file format middeck hatch structural units station configuration space program
date_range

Date

2011
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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label_outline Explore Middeck Hatch, Shuttle Endeavour Payload Bay, Ams 2

S131E013611 - STS-131 - PLB and MPLM

S134E007371 - STS-134 - View of AMS-2 stowed in the Endeavour Payload Bay

Navy Ship AMS-190 - Public domain photogrpaph

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- A "towback" vehicle slowly pulls shuttle Endeavour from the Shuttle Landing Facility to Orbiter Processing Facility-1 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. A purge unit that pumps conditioned air into a shuttle after landing is connected to Endeavour's aft end. In the background is the massive Vehicle Assembly Building. Once inside the processing facility, Endeavour will be prepared for future public display. Endeavour's final return from space completed the 16-day, 6.5-million-mile STS-134 mission. Main gear touchdown was at 2:34:51 a.m. EDT, followed by nose gear touchdown at 2:35:04 a.m., and wheelstop at 2:35:36 a.m. Endeavour and its crew delivered the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS) and the Express Logistics Carrier-3 (ELC-3) to the International Space Station. AMS will help researchers understand the origin of the universe and search for evidence of dark matter, strange matter and antimatter from the station. ELC-3 carried spare parts that will sustain station operations once the shuttles are retired from service. STS-134 was the 25th and final flight for Endeavour, which spent 299 days in space, orbited Earth 4,671 times and traveled 122,883,151 miles. Photo credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller KSC-2011-4273

Navy Ship AMS-190 - Public domain photogrpaph

S134E011847 - STS-134 - Exterior view of the ISS

S131E007751 - STS-131 - PLB, SSRMS, and MPLM

S135E008415 - STS-135 - Survey View of AMS-02

Navy Ship AMS-190 - Public domain photogrpaph

S121E07905 - STS-121 - The orbiter PLB and Earth limb during STS-121

STS072-740-007 - STS-072 - Payload bay activity during second EVA of STS-72 mission

Navy Ship AMS-190 - Public domain photogrpaph

Topics

ams endeavour space shuttle view sts 134 endeavour nasa payload bay high resolution ultra high resolution alpha magnetic spectrometer shuttle endeavour payload bay endeavour payload bay shuttle payload bay sts 134 view ams 2 tiff sts 134 payloads bays preservation file format middeck hatch structural units station configuration space program