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STS-106 Mission Specialist Richard A. Mastracchio is helped with his launch and entry suit in the White Room before entering Space Shuttle Atlantis. The perfect on-time liftoff of Atlantis on mission STS-106 occurred at 8:45:47 a.m. EDT. On the 11-day mission to the International Space Station, the seven-member crew will perform support tasks on orbit, transfer supplies and prepare the living quarters in the newly arrived Zvezda Service Module. The first long-duration crew, dubbed “Expedition One,” is due to arrive at the Station in late fall. Landing of Atlantis is targeted for 4:45 a.m. EDT on Sept. 19 KSC-00pp1283

Williams in the Quest/Airlock during Expedition 13

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Seated in the slidewire basket at the 195-foot level of the Fixed Service Structure on Launch Pad 39A, STS-92 Mission Specialists Leroy Chiao, Peter J.K. “Jeff” Wisoff and Michael E. Lopez-Alegria practice emergency egress. They and other crew members have been taking part in Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test activities that also include a simulated countdown. STS-92 is scheduled to launch Oct. 5 at 9:38 p.m. EDT on the fifth flight to the International Space Station. It will carry two elements of the Space Station, the Integrated Truss Structure Z1 and the third Pressurized Mating Adapter. The mission is also the 100th flight in the Shuttle program KSC-00pp1376

Expedition 10 Preflight, Russian Space Program

STS110-336-019 - STS-110 - MS Smith poses during the third EVA of STS-110

STS101-373-003 - STS-101 - Views of the EVA taken during STS-101

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Taking a break during Crew Equipment Interface Test activities at SPACEHAB are STS-106 Mission Specialists Boris V. Morukov, Yuri I. Malenchenko and Edward T. Lu. Malenchenko and Morukov represent the Russian Aviation and Space Agency. STS-106 is scheduled to launch Sept. 8, 2000, at 8:31 a.m. EDT from Launch Pad 39B on an 11-day mission to the International Space Station. The seven-member crew will prepare the Space Station for its first resident crew and begin outfitting the newly arrived Zvezda Service Module. They will perform support tasks on orbit, transfer supplies and prepare the Zvezda living quarters for the first long-duration crew, dubbed “Expedition One,” which is due to arrive at the Station in late fall KSC00pp0945

STS102-346-021 - STS-102 - Close views of Paul Richards during an EVA

STS-125 MS3 Grunsfeld during EVA1

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STS-124 - LAUNCH - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

description

Summary

Description: DIGITAL REMOTE FIXED STILL SEQUENTIAL COVERAGE OF WHITE ROOM ACTIVITIES AND FLIGHT CREW INGRESS JUST PRIOR TO LAUNCH. FOCUS AT 8 FEET AND LOCK CAMERA INTO MOUNT. LENS SET TO MANUAL FOCUS. ZOOM LENS SET TO 17MM. WHITE BALANCE ON FLUORESCENT.

IF CAMERA IS INSTALLED IN WHITE ROOM, POWER SWITCH SHOULD BE LEFT IN ON POSITION. IF REMOVED, IT SHOULD BE PUT IN OFF POSITION.

Item: DD033-39A

Date Taken: 5/31/2008

Image Type: DIGITAL STILLS

STS124 LAUNCH AND LANDING

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Tags

sts 124 discovery nasa launch and landing spacesuits white room activities launch preparations high resolution ultra high resolution white room camera lens digital stills sts 124 white balance digital remote flight crew ingress manual focus sequential coverage focus power switch astronauts space station space program
date_range

Date

25/07/2005 - 21/07/2011
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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 Digital Stills Sts 124, Power Switch, Manual Focus

Topics

sts 124 discovery nasa launch and landing spacesuits white room activities launch preparations high resolution ultra high resolution white room camera lens digital stills sts 124 white balance digital remote flight crew ingress manual focus sequential coverage focus power switch astronauts space station space program