STS-52
Mission Insignia | |
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File:Sts-52-patch.jpg | |
Mission Statistics | |
Mission: | STS-52 |
Shuttle: | Columbia |
Launch Pad: | 39-B |
Launch: | October 22, 1992, 1:09:39:6433 p.m. EDT. |
Landing: | November 1, 1992, 9:05:53 a.m. EST, Runway 33, Kennedy Space Center. Fla. |
Duration: | 9 days, 20 hours, 56 minutes and 13 seconds. |
Orbit Altitude: | 163 nautical miles (302 km) |
Orbit Inclination: | 28.45 degrees |
Distance Traveled: | 4,129,028 miles (6,645,026 km) |
Crew photo | |
Previous mission: STS-47 |
Next mission: STS-53 |
Crew
- James B. Wetherbee (2), Commander
- Michael A. Baker (2), Pilot
- Charles L. Veach (2), Mission Specialist 1
- William M. Shepherd (3), Mission Specialist 2
- Tamara E. Jernigan (2), Mission Specialist 3
- Steven G. MacLean (1), Payload Specialist 1 - Canada
Mission Parameters
- Mass:
- Orbiter landing with payload: 97,201 kg
- Payload: 8,078 kg
- Perigee: 304 km
- Apogee: 307 km
- Inclination: 28.5°
- Period: 90.6 min
Mission Highlights
Primary mission objectives were deployment of the Laser Geodynamic Satellite II (LAGEOS-II) and operation of the U.S. Microgravity Payload-1 (USMP-1). LAGEOS-II, a joint effort between NASA and the Italian Space Agency (ASI), was deployed on day 2 and boosted into an initial elliptical orbit by ASI's Italian Research Interim Stage (IRIS). The spacecraft's apogee kick motor later circularized LAGEOS orbit at its operational altitude of 3,666 miles. The USMP-1, activated on day one, included three experiments mounted on two connected Mission Peculiar Equipment Support Structures (MPESS) mounted in the orbiter's cargo bay. USMP-1 experiments were: Lambda Point Experiment; Materiel Pour L'Etude Des Phenomenes Interessant La Solidification Sur Et En Orbite (MEPHISTO), sponsored by the French agency Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales; and Space Acceleration Measurement System (SAMS).
Secondary payloads: (1) Canadian experiment, CANEX-2, located in both the orbiter's cargo bay and middeck and which consisted of Space Vision System (SVS); Materials Exposure in Low-Earth Orbit (MELEO); Queen's University Experiment in Liquid-Metal Diffusion (QUELD); Phase Partitioning in Liquids (PARLIQ); Sun Photospectrometre Earth Atmosphere Measurement-2 (SPEAM-2); Orbiter Glow-2 (OGLOW-2); and Space Adaptation Tests and Observations (SATO). A small, specially marked satellite, the Canadian Target Assembly, was deployed on day nine, to support SVS experiments. (2) ASP, featuring three independent sensors mounted on a Hitchhiker plate in the cargo bay -, Modular Star Sensor, Yaw Earth Sensor and Low Altitude Conical Earth Sensor, all provided by the European Space Agency.
Other middeck payloads: Commercial Materials Dispersion Apparatus Instrument Technology Associates Experiments; Commercial Protein Crystal Growth experiment; Chemical Vapor Transport Experiment; Heat Pipe Performance Experiment; Physiological Systems Experiment (involving 12 rodents); and Shuttle Plume Impingement Experiment. The orbiter also was used as a reference point for calibrating an Ultraviolet Plume Instrument on an orbiting Strategic Defense Initiative Organization satellite.
The Tank Pressure Control Experiment/Thermal Phenomena (TPCE/TP) was contained in a Getaway Special (GAS) canister in the orbiter's cargo bay.
See also
- Space science
- Space shuttle
- List of space shuttle missions
- List of human spaceflights chronologically