Just a day
after landing from their 15-day flight aboard space shuttle Discovery, the crew
of STS-120 returned home to Houston
on Thursday, where they were met by their NASA coworkers, family, friends, fans
and the President of the United States George Bush.
The
President, in town for other meetings, met the crew at Ellington Field as they
were arriving from Florida and he was
preparing to board Air Force One for San
Antonio. Their meeting was private but Michael Coats,
director of Johnson Space Center,
shared some of Bush's words while
introducing the astronauts to the assembled crowd.
"For
the last 24 hours, I've been trying to think of the right words to describe
this mission and all I could come up with was 'Wow, what a terrific
mission,'" said Coats, who is also a former astronaut. "I felt bad
about that. I felt like after 30 years in this business, I should be able to
come up with something better than that."
"But
this morning, when President Bush landed on Air Force One and I got to be one
of the greeters out there to say hello to him, as soon as he got off the plane
he said, 'Wow, what a terrific mission.' So I think that is pretty appropriate,
it truly was a terrific mission," said Coats to laughter from the
audience.
The 'terrific mission'
launched on Oct. 23 to deliver the Harmony node to the International Space
Station. The Italian-built U.S.
multi-port module will allow European and Japanese science labs to be added to
the orbiting outpost. The shuttle astronauts returned
to Earth on Wednesday.
"Harmony
is just beautiful, it is an inspiration to see and it was an astronaut heaven.
It was clean and bright and airy and beautiful," recalled STS-120 commander
Pam Melroy speaking at her and her crew's homecoming.
Her
favorite moment from the mission however, came as a result of something that
wasn't planned when Discovery launched with her at the helm. After moving a large
truss assembly to its permanent berth, Melroy's crew began to deploy its two
power-providing solar array wings. The first array unfolded without issue. The
second was nearly fully extended when a tear in its blanket was spotted. A
daring spacewalk was quickly devised by flight controllers which required the
crew build a set of array-stabilizing
cuff links and to use the station's 50-foot (15-meter) robot arm and
the orbiter's 50-foot inspection boom in a way never before attempted.
"By
the end of the night before we were ready to go out, Peggy [Whitson, ISS
commander] and George [Zamka, STS-120 pilot] had finished building the cuff
links, the EVA [spacewalk] and robotics teams had several tag-ups independently
and the whole crew came together, and this really required every single person
on both crews to pull their weight and more to make it happen," recounted
Melroy.
"And
everyone came together, and I just kind of hung back for a moment and listened,
as everybody was talking about what needed to be done. And there were these
ideas popping out of everybody's mouths. 'We have to remember this,' 'Don't
forget that,' 'We're going to do this way and that will be the safest.' It was
just wonderful to see the team come together and I knew that that was being
reflected on the ground at the same time."
"That
the best of everything was coming out," continued Melroy, "the
engineering, ingenuity, the teamwork but most of all the total dedication to
human spaceflight, to allow us to pull something incredible like that off. It
was really amazing for me, it was on overwhelming moment."
The
spacewalk itself was made by Scott Parazynski, a veteran of four earlier
missions, and first-time flyer Doug "Wheels" Wheelock. Parazynski rode
the arm and boom to the site of the tear while Wheelock monitored the array
from its base, advising his spacewalking partner to take caution when the
electrically-charged wing swayed close.
Wheelock
was positioned such that he could keep sight of Parazynski, which had him out
of direct sunlight and remaining stationary. That led ground controllers to
warn him of the temperature.
"It
was like, 'Oh yeah, Wheels, by the way, it is going to be a little cold down
where you are,'" Wheelock explained, "so, I appreciate all the
training we got on the [spacesuit] because I exercised every bit of that suit.
It was freezing cold down there. I exercised my glove heaters for the first
time and went into bypass on my EMU. My teeth were chattering, but I was trying
to hold still there," confessed Wheelock.
While
Wheels was 'down there', Parazynski was up high on the station arm (SSRMS) and
orbiter's boom (OBSS).
"I'd
also like to take you to the very highest branch of the tallest tree, the
'treetop' as I called it, on the end of the SSRMS, coupled with the OBSS boom,
coupled with a WIF [worksite interface] adapter and then a foot restraint at
the very top of all this thing, one foot away from an enormous solar
array," said Parazynski. "I felt confident with Robeau [Stephanie
Wilson] at the helm, also Dan Tani driving the arm, and knowing that brilliant
men and women here at the Johnson Space Center
had developed all the trajectories to get me there safely."
"After
we had spent three, maybe four hours out there at the worksite, just an
incredible sight, very intense, I was very focused, my whole universe was just
the solar array in front of me, I did a layback and looked down at Wheels and I
gave him the STS-120 salute which is a fist bump, and then spirit
fingers," said Parazynksi as he performed the salute. "So, it's a
fist bump with attitude."
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