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A great view of TJ Creamer inside the Cupola:
Hi-res version.
And a great "fish-eye lens" view of the newly installed Cupola RWS:
Hi-res version.
---------- Post added at 08:51 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:09 AM ----------
From ISS Daily Report for 15/05/2010:
Caldwell-Dyson installed the 5-ft ISA/VAJ (Internal Sampling Adapter/Vacuum Access Jumper) and used it for pressurizing and leak-checking PMA-2, leaving the equipment connected for PMA-2 leak checking after docking.
Conjunction Alert:
A potential conjunction with an unidentified piece of orbital debris (Object # 87761) approximately one hour after docking is under investigation by US & Russian teams but should have little impact on rendezvous plans. [Teams are considering a small, ISS-only, retrograde DAM (Debris Avoidance Maneuver) of 0.5 m/s delta-V (burn duration ~5 min 51 sec), which, if required, would be performed at approximately 1:08 PM GMT tomorrow (16/05) morning (retrograde being beneficial for Soyuz TMA-17/21S landing options next month and also preferable over posigrade for the Shuttle rendezvous). The nominal Shuttle maneuvers tomorrow will control the Shuttle trajectory along a nominal rendezvous profile whether the ISS DAM is performed or not. Should the DAM be performed, subsequent events including the RPM start window will shift earlier by 30 seconds due to a shift in sun lighting. Final GO/NO-GO for the DAM is at approximately 10:00 PM GMT tonight (15/05).
Hi-res version.
And a great "fish-eye lens" view of the newly installed Cupola RWS:
Hi-res version.
---------- Post added at 08:51 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:09 AM ----------
From ISS Daily Report for 15/05/2010:
Caldwell-Dyson installed the 5-ft ISA/VAJ (Internal Sampling Adapter/Vacuum Access Jumper) and used it for pressurizing and leak-checking PMA-2, leaving the equipment connected for PMA-2 leak checking after docking.
Conjunction Alert:
A potential conjunction with an unidentified piece of orbital debris (Object # 87761) approximately one hour after docking is under investigation by US & Russian teams but should have little impact on rendezvous plans. [Teams are considering a small, ISS-only, retrograde DAM (Debris Avoidance Maneuver) of 0.5 m/s delta-V (burn duration ~5 min 51 sec), which, if required, would be performed at approximately 1:08 PM GMT tomorrow (16/05) morning (retrograde being beneficial for Soyuz TMA-17/21S landing options next month and also preferable over posigrade for the Shuttle rendezvous). The nominal Shuttle maneuvers tomorrow will control the Shuttle trajectory along a nominal rendezvous profile whether the ISS DAM is performed or not. Should the DAM be performed, subsequent events including the RPM start window will shift earlier by 30 seconds due to a shift in sun lighting. Final GO/NO-GO for the DAM is at approximately 10:00 PM GMT tonight (15/05).