This story was updated at 12:47 p.m. EST.
HOUSTON — The seven astronauts of
NASA's shuttle Atlantis are spending Valentine's Day with their very own Dr.
Love and are due for a break as they start up a new European lab at the
International Space Station (ISS).
Dr. Stanley Love, an
astronomer-turned-astronaut, and his STS-122 crewmates are scheduled to have a
few hours off today to explore the ISS or peer down at their home planet before
resuming work on the newly
installed Columbus lab for the European Space Agency (ESA).
Flight controllers at NASA's Mission
Control here at the Johnson Space Center roused the crew at 3:45 a.m. EST (0845
GMT) with the song "Consider Yourself at Home," a tune from the musical
"Oliver!" played especially for Love by his family.
"That's a wonderful song, thanks so
much for sending it," said Love, 42. He thanked his parents and family "and
people who may be feeling there's one fewer Love on Earth this Valentine's Day.
But I'd like to assure them that it's great to be up here, and I'll be home
soon."
In addition to resting and working
with the 1.4 billion euro ($2 billion) Columbus, Atlantis astronauts took an
orbital call from German Chancellor Angela Merkel and ESA dignitaries. Among
the spaceflyers launched to the ISS aboard Atlantis were ESA astronauts Hans
Schlegel, of Germany, and Leopold
Eyharts of France.
"It's still hard to believe that
it's real," Eyharts said. "It went very fast."
Schlegel, a veteran astronaut, completed
his first-ever spacewalk on Wednesday with crewmate Rex Walheim after
missing an earlier outing due to an illness. All of Germany was proud of their
astronaut's work, Merkel said.
"It was a pleasure to go out there,"
Schlegel said, adding that there was some tension since it was his first time,
but the spacewalk went well. "You don't know you you're going to be and how you're
going to reach because, of course, you're very high up there."
ESA director general Jean-Jacques Dordain and German astronaut Thomas Reiter also lauded the
astronauts Columbus work.
Extended flight
The Atlantis crew is the middle of
what is now a
13-day mission to install Columbus and swap out one member of the space
station's three-person Expedition 16 crew. Mission managers extended the
spaceflight, which launched Feb. 7, by one day late Wednesday to give the astronauts more time to outfit the 23-foot
(7-meter) long Columbus lab for orbital flight.
"Certainly we look forward to
another day on board the space station," Atlantis commander Stephen Frick
radioed down to NASA's Mission Control here at the Johnson Space Center after
hearing of the extra day.
NASA ISS flight controller Ron
Spencer said astronauts will focus their extra day primarily on the activation
of Biolab, a biological research rack inside the
ESA's Columbus lab.
"We're going to finish outfitting
the Biolab payload, which was delivered in the
Columbus module, so that they can begin science operations immediately after
undock," Spencer said in a Thursday mission status update.
The new module's activation was waylaid
yesterday by a software glitch that prevented commands from the ESA's mission
control center near Munich, Germany from uploading into Columbus. But by the
day's end, flight controllers had fixed the problem and sent all the required
commands, mission managers said.
"We're thrilled to be part of the
activation of a brand new lab on the space station," Atlantis mission
specialist Dan Tani told Munich flight controllers.
Tani is completing a two-month tour
as part of the station's Expedition 16 crew and will return to Earth with
Atlantis' STS-122 crew next week. Eyharts will replace Tani and stay aboard the
station until NASA's next shuttle mission arrives in March.
The shuttle crew also received word
that their spacecraft's heat shield was cleared for landing, which is now set
for Feb. 20.
"That's great news about the
[thermal protection system]," Frick said.
Final spacewalk ahead
The 10 astronauts aboard Atlantis
and the space station will also spend some time today preparing for a planned
Friday spacewalk.
That excursion, the third spacewalk of the
STS-122 mission, will send Love and Walheim outside the ISS to attach science
experiments to the exterior of Columbus, retrieve a broken gyroscope, inspect a
balky solar wing joint and use a cobbled-together tool to determine whether a
damaged handrail near the station's Quest airlock may pose a tear hazard for
spacesuit gloves.
Love discovered the ding — which
Mission Control gave the lighthearted name "Love Crater" — during a Monday
spacewalk. Astronauts will wrap a metal tool with a spacesuit glove overwrap,
known as an overglove, to test the ding's effect on spacesuit
fabric.
"The crew is going to go out there
and rub this on the handrail to see if there's any damage on the glove,"
Spencer said.
NASA is broadcasting Atlantis'
STS-122 mission live on NASA TV. Click
here for SPACE.com's shuttle mission coverage and NASA TV feed.