Sept. 1, 2006
Allard Beutel
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-4769
Bruce Buckingham
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
MEDIA ADVISORY: M06-141
NASA STARTS SPACE SHUTTLE ATLANTIS COUNTDOWN SEPT. 3
NASA will start the launch countdown for Space Shuttle Atlantis'
STS-115 mission at 8 a.m. EDT Sunday, Sept. 3, at the T-43 hour
point.
During this mission, Atlantis' crew will resume construction of the
International Space Station, which is the goal of the remaining space
shuttle flights until the spacecraft are retired in 2010.
The first countdown for Atlantis' launch was stopped because of
Tropical Storm Ernesto.
The countdown includes 33 hours, 24 minutes of built-in hold time
leading to a preferred launch time at approximately 12:29 p.m. EDT
Wednesday, Sept. 6. The launch window for Wednesday extends an
additional five minutes.
This mission is the 116th space shuttle flight, the 27th flight for
Atlantis and the 19th U.S. flight to the International Space Station.
STS-115 is scheduled to last 11 days with a landing at NASA's Kennedy
Space Center, Fla., about 8:03 a.m. EDT Sunday, Sept. 17.
Atlantis' last mission was STS-112 in October 2002. In preparation for
STS-115, Atlantis was moved into Kennedy's Vehicle Assembly Building
on July 24. Atlantis then was attached to its modified external tank
and solid rocket boosters. Space Shuttle Atlantis was rolled out to
Launch Pad 39B on Aug. 2. The initial launch date of Aug. 27 was
scrubbed to evaluate the shuttle and its systems after a lightning
strike at the launch pad. A partial rollback to the Vehicle Assembly
Building took place Aug. 29 due to concerns about Tropical Depression
Ernesto.
The STS-115 crew is Commander Brent Jett, Pilot Chris Ferguson, and
mission specialists Joe Tanner, Dan Burbank, Heide Stefanyshyn-Piper
and Canadian astronaut Steve MacLean.
During STS-115, Atlantis' astronauts will deliver and install the
17.5-ton, bus-sized P3/P4 integrated truss segment on the station.
The girder-like truss includes a set of giant solar arrays, batteries
and associated electronics. The P3/P4 truss segment will provide
one-fourth of the total power-generation capability for the completed
station.
For information about the STS-115 crew and mission to the pace
station, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle
STS-115 LAUNCH COUNTDOWN MILESTONES AND TIMES
(All times Eastern)
Launch-3 Days (Sunday, Sept. 3)
Prepare for the start of the STS-115 launch countdown
Perform the call to stations (7:30 a.m.)
Countdown begins at the T-43 hour mark (8 a.m.)
Begin final vehicle and facility closeouts for launch
Check out backup flight systems
Review flight software stored in mass memory units and display systems
Load backup flight system software into Atlantis' general purpose
computers
Remove flight-deck platforms (4:30 p.m.)
Complete preparation to load power reactant storage and distribution
system (7 p.m.)
Activate and test navigational systems (9 p.m.)
Flight deck preliminary inspections complete (midnight)
Launch-2 Days (Monday, Sept. 4)
Enter first built-in hold at T-27 hours for duration of 4 hours
(midnight)
Clear launch pad of all non-essential personnel
Perform test of the vehicle's pyrotechnic initiator controllers
Resume countdown (4 a.m.)
Begin operations to load cryogenic reactants into Atlantis' fuel cell
storage tanks
(4 a.m.)
Enter 4-hour built-in hold at T-19 hours (noon)
Demate orbiter mid-body umbilical unit (12:30 p.m.)
Resume orbiter and ground support equipment closeouts
Resume countdown (10 p.m.)
Final preparations of the shuttle's three main engines for main
propellant tanking and flight (10 p.m.)
Begin filling pad sound suppression system water tank (midnight)
Launch-1 Day (Tuesday, Sept. 5)
Pad sound suppression system water tank filling complete (3 a.m.)
Close out the tail service masts on the mobile launcher platform
Begin star tracker functional checks (5:50 a.m.)
Enter planned hold at T-11 hours for 13 hours, 34 minutes (6 a.m.)
Activate orbiter's inertial measurement units
Activate the orbiter's communications systems
Install film in numerous cameras on the launch pad (6:55 a.m.)
Flight crew equipment late stow (11:10 p.m.)
Move Rotating Service Structure to the park position (3 p.m.)
Perform ascent switch list
Fuel cell flow-through purge complete
Resume countdown at T-11 hours (7:34 p.m.)
Activate the orbiter's fuel cells (8:45 p.m.)
Clear the blast danger area of all non-essential personnel
Switch Atlantis' purge air to gaseous nitrogen (9:20 p.m.)
Launch Day (Wednesday, Sept. 6)
Enter planned 2-hour built-in hold at the T-6 hour mark (12:34 a.m.)
Launch team verifies no violations of launch commit criteria prior to
cryogenic loading of the external tank
Clear pad of all personnel
Resume countdown (2:34 a.m.)
Chilldown of propellant transfer lines (2:34 a.m.)
Begin loading the external tank with about 500,000 gallons of
cryogenic propellants (about 2:44 a.m.)
Complete filling the external tank with its flight load of liquid
hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellants (about 5:34 a.m.)
Final Inspection Team proceeds to launch pad
Enter planned 3-hour built-in hold at T-3 hours (5:34 a.m.)
Perform inertial measurement unit preflight calibration
Align Merritt Island Launch Area tracking antennas
Perform open loop test with Eastern Range
Resume countdown at T-3 hours (8:34 a.m.)
Crew departs Operations and Checkout Building for the pad (8:38 a.m.)
Complete closeout preparations in the White Room
Check cockpit switch configurations
Flight crew begins entry into the orbiter (about 9:10 a.m.)
Astronauts perform air-to-ground voice checks with Launch and Mission
Control
Begin to close Atlantis' crew hatch (about 10 a.m.)
Begin Eastern Range final network open loop command checks
Perform hatch seal and cabin leak checks
Complete White Room closeout
Closeout crew moves to fallback area
Primary ascent guidance data is transferred to the backup flight
system
Enter planned 10-minute hold at T-20 minutes (11:14 a.m.)
NASA test director conducts final launch team briefings
Complete inertial measurement unit preflight alignments
Resume countdown at T-20 minutes (11:24 a.m.)
Transition the orbiter's onboard computers to launch configuration
Start fuel cell thermal conditioning
Close orbiter cabin vent valves
Transition backup flight system to launch configuration
Enter estimated 40-minute hold at T-9 minutes (11:35 a.m.)
Launch director, Mission Management Team and NASA test director
conduct final polls for "go/no go" to launch
Resume countdown at T-9 minutes (about 12:20 p.m.)
Start automatic ground launch sequencer (T-9 minutes)
Retract orbiter crew access arm (T-7:30)
Start mission recorders (T-6:15)
Start Auxiliary Power Units (T-5)
Arm solid rocket booster and external tank range safety safe and arm
devices (T-5)
Start liquid oxygen drainback (T-4:55)
Start orbiter aerosurface profile test (T-3:55)
Start main engine gimbal profile test (T-3:30)
Pressurize liquid oxygen tank (T-2:55)
Begin retraction of the gaseous oxygen vent arm (T-2:55)
Fuel cells to internal reactants (T-2:35)
Pressurize liquid hydrogen tank (T-1:57)
Deactivate bi-pod heaters (T-1:52)
Deactivate solid rocket booster joint heaters (T-1)
Orbiter transfers from ground to internal power (T-0:50 seconds)
Ground Launch Sequencer go for auto sequence start (T-0:31 seconds)
Booster gimbal profile (T-0:21 seconds)
Ignition of three space shuttle main engines (T-6.6 seconds)
Booster ignition and liftoff (T-0)
CREW FOR MISSION STS-115
Commander: Brent Jett
Pilot: Chris Ferguson
Payload Commander (MS1): Joe Tanner
Mission Specialist (MS2): Dan Burbank
Mission Specialist (MS3): Heide Stefanyshyn-Piper
Mission Specialist (MS4): Steve MacLean
SUMMARY OF STS-115 LAUNCH DAY CREW ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, Sept. 6
--1:30 a.m. Crew wakes up
--3 a.m. Breakfast
--6:55 a.m. Television coverage from crew quarters
--7:58 a.m. Weather briefing
--8:08 a.m. Don flight suits
--8:38 a.m. Depart for launch pad
--9:08 a.m. Arrive at White Room and begin ingress
--10:23 a.m. Close crew hatch
--12:29 a.m. Launch
-- Televised events (times may vary slightly)
All times Eastern
-end-