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NASA MissionSummary National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington, D.C. 20546 (202) 358-1100

STS-119 MISSION SUMMARY FEBRUARY 2009 DISCOVERY (STS-119) Discovery'sSTS119flightwilldelivertheInternationalSpaceStation'sfourthandfinalsetof solararraywings,completingthestation’struss,orbackbone.Thearrayswillprovidetheelec tricitytofullypowerscienceexperimentsandsupportthestation'sexpandedcrewofsixin May.The14daymissionwillfeaturefourspacewalkstohelpinstalltheS6trusssegmentto thestarboard,orright,sideofthestationandthedeploymentofitssolararrays.Theflightalso willreplaceafailedunitforasystemthatconvertsurinetopotablewater. Theshuttlealsowill deliverthefirstJapanAerospaceExplorationAgency’sresidentstationcrewmemberandbring backaU.S.aftermorethanthreemonthsaboardtheorbitinglaboratory. CREW

Lee Archambault (ARSHumboe) Tony Antonelli (antuhNELlee) Commander(Colonel,U.S.AirForce) Pilot(Commander,U.S.Navy) ●Veteranofone,pilotonSTS117 ●Firstspaceflight ●Age:48,Hometown:Bellwood,Ill. ●Age:41,Born:Detroit ●Marriedwiththreechildren ●Marriedwithtwochildren ●Logged4,250+hoursin30+differentaircraft ●Logged3,200+hoursin41differentaircraft ●Enjoysbicycling,weightliftingandicehockey ●InterestsincludesnowboardingandNASCAR Joseph Acaba (ahCAHbah) Steve Swanson MissionSpecialist1 MissionSpecialist2 ●Firstspaceflight ●Veteranofonespaceflight,STS117 ●Formermiddleandhighschoolscienceteacher ●Accumulatedover13hoursintwospacewalks ●Age:41,Hometown:Anaheim,Calif. ●Age:48,Hometown:SteamboatSprings,Colo. ●ServedtwoyearsinU.S.PeaceCorps ●Ph.D.computerscience,A&M,1998 ●Enjoyscamping,kayakingandscubadiving ●Marriedwiththreechildren

Richard Arnold John Phillips MissionSpecialist3 MissionSpecialist4 ●Firstspaceflight ●Veteranoftwoflightsandonespacewalk ●Formermiddleandhighschoolscienceteacher ●Expedition11flightengineer ●Age:45,Hometown:Bowie,Md. ●Age:57,Hometown:Scottsdale,Ariz. ●Marriedwithtwodaughters ●Ph.D.geophysics&spacephysics1987,UCLA ●Enjoysguitar,running,camping ●Marriedwithtwochildren

Koichi Wakata (koEEchee)(wahKAHtah) MissionSpecialist5/Expedition18Flightengineer Expedition18FlightEngineer&ScienceOfficer ●Veteranoftwo,STS72&STS92 MissionSpecialist5 ●Age:45,Born:Saitama,Japan ●FlewonSTS112&126inNovembertostation ●Ph.D.aerospaceengineering,KyushuU,2004 ●Ph.D.materialscience&engineering,GIT1996 ●Marriedwithson ●Age:44,Born:Belleville,Ill. ●ReturnsonSTS127,targetedJune2009 ●ReturnstoEarthonSTS119 TheSTS119patchshapeisofasolararrayviewedatanangle.Thestation isinthecenter,belowthegoldastronautsymbol.Thegoldarrayhighlights themission’sinstallationofthetrusssegmentanddeploymentofitsarrays. TheJapaneseKibomoduleismarkedbyaredcircle.The17whitestarsrep resent,inthecrew'swords,"theenormoussacrificethecrewsofApollo1, Challenger,andColumbiahavegiventoourspaceprogram."TheU.S.flag flowingintotheshuttlesignifiestheU.S.’ssupportforourspaceprogram. SPACEWALKS Eachwilllastapproximately6.5hours. • Onflightday5,frominside,PhillipsandWakatawillusethestation’sroboticarmtoputtheS6trusssegmentintoposi tion.SpacewalkersSwansonandArnoldwillassistwiththeinstallationoftheS6andunstowthesolararrayblanket boxesonthearraystructure.Thearrayswillbedeployedonflightday8.Thealsowilldeployaheatdissi patingradiatorontheS6truss. • Onflightday7,SwansonandAcabawillbeginworktoprepareasetofbatteriesforremovalontheP6truss.Thebat terieswillbereplacedontheSTS127mission.TheywilldeployattachmentfixturesontheP3andS3trussesand hookupnewfluidconnectionsbetweentheP1andP3trusssegments. • Onflightday9,ArnoldandAcabawillrelocateequipmentcarts,removeandreplaceapairofcircuitbreakers,lubri catethehandofthestation'sroboticarm,andinstallthermalblanketsontheDextrerobot.Dextrecanbeattachedto thestation’sarmtohandlesmallercomponentstypicallyrequiringaspacewalker. • Onflightday11,SwansonandArnoldwillinstallaGPSantennaontheexterioroftheJapaneselogisticsmoduleand photographtheradiatorsonthetruss,usingbothregularandinfraredcameras.InSeptember,groundcontrollersno ticeddamagetoonepanelofthestarboardradiator,andthephotoswillhelpthemdeterminehowthedamageisaf fectingit.ThespacewalkersalsowillconfigurecablesonanelectricalpanelontheZ1truss,installawirelesshelmet cameraantennaontheS3trussandcontinuetheinstallationofpayloadattachmentdevicesontheS3.

Figure 1: Space station configuration after STS-119 FACTS & FIGURES • STS119isthe125thspaceshuttleflight,the28thflighttothestation,the36thflightforDiscoveryandthefirstflight in2009.EightflightstostationandonetoNASA’sHubbleSpaceTelescoperemainbeforetheshuttlesretirein2010. • Theflightfeaturestwoofthethreeformerschoolteachersselectedasmissionspecialistsinthe2004EducatorAstro nautClass.TeacherturnedastronautDottieMetcalfLindenburgeristargetedtolaunchinFebruary2010. • Thetrussisahightechgirderstructuremadeupof11segments.Itprovidesthebackboneforthestation,supporting theU.S.solararrays,radiatorsandotherequipment. • ToinstalltheS6trusssegment,thestation'sroboticarmmustextenditsreachjustaboutasfarasitwillgo(about57 feet),leavingitwithverylittleroomtomaneuver. • TheS6trusssegmentweighsalittlemorethan31,000pounds. • AfterS6installation,thetrusswillbe335feetlong. • Eachsolararraywinghastwo115footlongarrays,foratotalwingspanof240feet,includingtheequipmentthat connectsthetwowingsandallowsthemtotwistastheytrackthesun. • Altogether,thestation’sarrayscangenerateasmuchas120kilowattsofusableelectricity–enoughtopro videaboutfortytwo2,800squarefoothomeswithpower.TheadditionoftheS6willnearlydoublethe amountofpowerforstationscience—from15kilowattsto30kilowatts. • TheUrineProcessingAssemblythatremovesimpuritiesfromurineinanearlystageoftherecyclingprocessisnot working.TheentireWaterRecoverySystemwasdeliveredandinstalledduringtheSTS126missioninNovember. Astronautswereabletocoaxitintousebyperforminginflightmaintenance,butadistillationunitfailedafterEndeav our'sdeparture.ThereplacementunitwillflyinDiscovery'smiddeckandbeinstalledbySandraMagnuswhileother crewmembersareworkingonthemission'ssecondspacewalk. • Discoverywillflyoneheatshieldtileunderneathitsleftwingthatwillhaveabumpraised0.25inchessothatheating effectsaremonitoredataboutMach15duringreentry,whenthesmooth,laminarflowofairclosetotheshuttle’ssur facebecomesturbulentorisdisrupted.Thisinformationwillsupportcomputermodelinganddesigneffortsforthe shuttleandNASA’snextgenerationspacecraft.