HOUSTON — Seven
astronauts chasing the International Space Station (ISS) will catch up today,
delivering a shiny new science module and a fresh crew member to the orbital
outpost.
Led by commander Stephen Frick, the
STS-122 crew of shuttle
Atlantis expects to latch onto the space station around 12:25 p.m. EST (1725
GMT) and climb aboard about one hour later. The three astronauts living on the
ISS said they are eagerly awaiting the space shuttle's arrival.
"We've really enjoyed training
with them and being with them in Houston," said Expedition 16 flight
engineer Dan Tani of Frick's crew on Friday. "It'll be a ball to have
them up here in orbit."
STS-122 mission specialist Leopold
Eyharts, a European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut, will swap places with Tani
and live on board the orbital outpost until late March.
Aside from Eyharts, Atlantis is also
delivering the ESA's 13.5-ton
Columbus laboratory today. European space officials hail Columbus as their first dedicated
orbital lab and will use the module for a variety of medical, physics, biological
and materials science experiments for at least the next seven years.
Before Atlantis can deliver the
space station's new room, however, it will have to close the gap between the
two spacecraft.
Orbital rendezvous
The orbiter, now traveling more than
17,500 mph (28,200 kph), will fire its engines around
9:37 a.m. EST (1437 GMT) in a final push to meet the space station. When they rendezvous, Frick will maneuver the 100-ton orbiter into a back
flip — called a Rendezvous Pitch Maneuver — beneath the space station so that
its crew can photograph the shuttle's
heat shield.
"We kick off this flip maneuver
and we see the station rapidly move over the nose [of Atlantis], then a couple
minutes later rise over the tail almost like a sunrise," Frick said in a
NASA interview. "We have the easy part. The ground ... has the hard part,
which is many hours of analyzing all that photography to look for the smallest
defects."
Mission managers said Friday the
heat-resistant tiles of Atlantis' heat shield appear to be in good shape, but
today's planned photographic inspection will decide whether or not to further
examine the orbiter's underbelly.
"Right now we don't see any
need for that, but of course we'll take a very close look," said John
Shannon, deputy shuttle program manager, on Friday. He noted that video from
Atlantis' solid rocket boosters (SRB), which were shed during
launch, should also help track any source of potential damage to the space
shuttle.
After the pitch maneuver, Frick will
pull Atlantis in front of the space station, slowly back toward Harmony module
and dock the orbiter onto a Pressurized Mating Adapter on the node. Frick and his crew were awakened for the docking day to the tune of "Powder Milk Biscuits," by the comedic radio show Prairie Home Companion.
"Thanks so much to my wonderful wife Jennifer for her little powder milk biscuits to wake up to in the morning," Frick said. He noted that his crew can't get any of them in space, "but we can still dream of some of the brown stains on the back that indicate freshness. We're looking forward to a great day of rendezvous today."
ISS commander
Peggy Whitson, who celebrates her 48th birthday today, said she's
especially looking forward to the arrival of Atlantis.
"My present is a new
module," Whitson said of the Columbus lab. "I'm really looking
forward to it."
NASA is broadcasting Atlantis'
STS-122 mission live on NASA TV. Click
here for SPACE.com's shuttle mission coverage and NASA TV feed.