Space Shuttle Atlantis
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| Space Shuttles |
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US Space Shuttle program
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Soviet Shuttle Buran program |
Atlantis was named in honor of the first United States oceanographic research vessel, a two-masted sailing ship operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution from 1930 to 1966, as well as the mythical island of Atlantis.
As the fourth shuttle, Atlantis benefited from experience gained in the construction of her three predecessors. On roll-out, she weighed nearly 7,000 lb (3 t) less than the first operational shuttle, Columbia, and required about half the time to build. Structural spare parts also built along with Atlantis were used in the later construction of the fifth shuttle, Endeavour.
Atlantis made her first flight in October 1985, conducting classified military activities, one of five such flights. In 1989, Atlantis deployed two planetary probes, Magellan and Galileo, and in 1991, she deployed the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory.
Beginning in 1995, Atlantis made seven straight flights to the Soviet space station Mir. On the second Mir flight, she delivered a docking module, and on the subsequent flights, she conducted astronaut exchanges.
From November 1997 to July 1999, Atlantis underwent refitting operations, with about 165 modifications made to the shuttle, including the installation of the Multifunction Electronic Display System, or glass cockpit. She has made six flights since then, all involving assembly activities at the International Space Station.
In her most recent flight, in October 2002, Atlantis and her six-person crew completed an 11-day mission to the International Space Station that involved three space walks.
NASA scheduled the 27th launch for Atlantis for September 2005, during the window of September 9 - 24. It was ruled unsafe to fly the mission and the launch window was missed, due to the complications during Discovery's launch of mission STS-114 and NASA's subsequent suspension of all future shuttle launches. She was the designated STS-300 rescue orbiter for the STS-114 mission. Atlantis was scheduled to fly the STS-121 mission, but it was decided that Discovery would fly the mission instead.
NASA Shuttle Program Manager Wayne Hale told Kennedy Space Center employees in mid-February 2006 that Atlantis would be retired sometime in 2008 and would be used to supply parts for Discovery and Endeavour through the anticipated close of the Space Shuttle program in 2010. [link] Atlantis was chosen for early decommissioning to avoid a costly overhaul process that was slated to begin in 2008.
Flights
Space Shuttle Atlantis has flown 26 flights, spent 220.40-days in space, completed 3,468 orbits, and flown 89,908,732 miles in total, as of February 2003. She last flew in October 2002.
| Date | Designation | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1985 October 3 | STS-51-J | Mission dedicated to Department of Defense |
| 1985 November 26 | STS-61-B | 3 communications satellites deployed: MORELOS-B, AUSSAT-2 and SATCOM KU-2. |
| 1988 December 2 | STS-27 | Mission dedicated to Department of Defense |
| 1989 May 4 | STS-30 | Deployed Magellan probe |
| 1989 October 18 | STS-34 | Deployed Galileo probe |
| 1990 February 28 | STS-36 | Mission dedicated to Department of Defense |
| 1990 November 15 | STS-38 | Mission dedicated to Department of Defense |
| 1991 April 5 | STS-37 | Deployed Compton Gamma Ray Observatory |
| 1991 August 2 | STS-43 | Deployed TDRS-5 |
| 1991 November 24 | STS-44 | Mission dedicated to Department of Defense |
| 1992 March 24 | STS-45 | Carried Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science (ATLAS) mission 1 |
| 1992 July 31 | STS-46 | Deployed ESA European Retrievable Carrier and NASA Tethered Satellite System |
| 1994 November 3 | STS-66 | Carried ATLAS mission 3 |
| 1995 June 29 | STS-71 | First shuttle docking with space station Mir |
| 1995 November 12 | STS-74 | Carried docking module to Mir |
| 1996 March 22 | STS-76 | Rendezvous with Mir, including crew transfer of Shannon Lucid |
| 1996 September 16 | STS-79 | Rendezvous with Mir, including crew transfer of Shannon Lucid and John Blaha |
| 1997 January 12 | STS-81 | Rendezvous with Mir, including crew transfer of John Blaha and Jerry Linenger |
| 1997 May 15 | STS-84 | Rendezvous with Mir, including crew transfer of Jerry Linenger and Michael Foale |
| 1997 September 25 | STS-86 | Rendezvous with Mir, including crew transfer of Michael Foale and David A. Wolf |
| 2000 May 19 | STS-101 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2000 September 8 | STS-106 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2001 February 7 | STS-98 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2001 July 12 | STS-104 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2002 April 8 | STS-110 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2002 October 7 | STS-112 | International Space Station assembly mission |
| 2006 August 28* | STS-115 | International Space Station resupply and construction. |
Trivia
- In the film Deep Impact the crew use the Space Shuttle Atlantis to get to the mission craft, Messiah.
- In the game The Dig, an unnamed shuttle participates in the mission of firing the asteroid. However in the game demo, the name "Atlantis" is mentioned.
- In the film Armageddon, the Space Shuttle Atlantis is destroyed in orbit at the beginning of the film by a meteor shower.
- In the episode of the animated show Recess which was called "Space Cadet," the class watch a space shuttle launch. The Space Shuttle is Atlantis.
- In the movie Space Camp, the space shuttle Atlantis is featured. The children were onboard the shuttle during an engine test when one of the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters was ignited.
- In the free space simulator Orbiter created by Martin Schweiger, Atlantis is the default space shuttle you can pilot.
- In the PlayStation game Treasures of the Deep, the player goes on a mission to destroy the shuttle's remains after it sinks in the Mariana Trench.
See also
External links
- [Orbiter Vehicles]
- [Shuttle Orbiter Atlantis (OV-104)]
- [Space Shuttle Atlantis in 3D] for Google Earth
| Space Shuttle Atlantis (OV-104) |
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| STS-51-J > STS-61-B | STS-27 | STS-30 | STS-34 | STS-36 | STS-38 | STS-37 | STS-43 | STS-44 | STS-45 | STS-46 | STS-66 | STS-71 | STS-74 | STS-76 | STS-79 | STS-81 | STS-84 | STS-86 | STS-101 | STS-98 | STS-104 |STS-110 | STS-112 |
| Upcoming: STS-115 > STS-117 | STS-120 | STS-124 | STS-126 |
| Status: Operational |
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