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E-grāmata: Assembling and Supplying the ISS: The Space Shuttle Fulfills Its Mission

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Springer Praxis Books
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jul-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319404431
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Springer Praxis Books
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jul-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319404431
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This book tells the story of the International Space Station from the perspective of the space shuttle's involvement in how the assembly and re-supply of the station evolved. It captures how the intricate and wide-reaching infrastructure required by each mission was managed and provides a comprehensive view of the relationship between the shuttle and ISS. The success in assembling the ISS over a period of 13 years came after gaining experience by sending the space shuttle to the Russian Mir space station in a three-year period during the second half of the 1990s, and after years of detailed study and evaluation. This book reviews those developments and how years of planning, hopes and dreams were turned into reality between 1995 and 2011. It provides detailed reviews of the space shuttle missions at space stations, including how the skills were developed to achieve these missions, what happened on those flights, and how lessons learned from one mission were applied to subsequent operations. Note that no mission failed in its main objective across nine Mir dockings and one rendezvous mission and 37 shuttle flights to the ISS. The smoothness and reliability of actual station operations masks the years of hard work that went into each mission both in space and on the ground. Using first-hand research, personal interviews and contemporary sources, an alternative story of the space shuttle is portrayed.

Recenzijas

In this volume, part of a series on space exploration, aeronautical historian Shayler focuses on the Space Shuttle's 37 missions devoted to building the International Space Station (ISS). The book contains fascinating photos from the NASA archives as well a wealth of tables and charts. Space program enthusiasts and historians will enjoy this detailed narrative. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals and general readers. (J. Z. Kiss, Choice, Vol. 55 (10), June, 2018)

Preface viii
Acknowledgements xii
Foreword xiv
Dedication xvii
Prologue xviii
1 An Alternative Plan
1(13)
Shuffling the Shuttle to Assemble the Station
2(1)
NASA's Tier-2: An Alternative Assembly Plan
3(9)
From Imagination to Reality
12(1)
Summary
12(2)
2 The Shuttle-ISS Assembly Missions
14(31)
Pages From History
15(1)
Shuttle Missions to Create the ISS (Phase- II)
16(7)
Shuttle Missions to Expand the ISS (Phase-III)
23(4)
Return to Flight, Again
27(14)
Shuttle at Station
41(4)
3 The Human Element
45(48)
Becoming Very Well Trained
45(3)
First ISS Assembly Crew Named
48(15)
A Real Space Odyssey in 2001
63(5)
Recovery
68(14)
Crew for the Final Scheduled Shuttle Mission
82(6)
2011: The Final Countdown(s)
88(2)
By the Numbers
90(3)
4 Putting It All Together
93(37)
Establishing an Efficient Timeline
94(1)
Mission Management Team
95(1)
Preparations at the Cape
96(6)
Space Station Hardware Processing
102(3)
Space Station Processing Facility
105(22)
Launch-On-Need
127(1)
Into the Wide Blue Yonder
127(3)
5 Getting There
130(20)
From Pad to Orbit
130(8)
Shuttle Docking Profile
138(5)
The Docked Phase
143(5)
Down to Business
148(2)
6 Crew Transfers and Loadmasters
150(22)
The Carriers
154(6)
The Stowage Facilities
160(1)
A Moving Experience
161(8)
Experiments and Investigations
169(1)
Summary
170(2)
7 Building a Space Station
172(19)
A Manipulator for Shuttle
172(5)
RMS on ISS Assembly Missions
177(5)
Using the Arms at the ISS
182(5)
RMS Legacy
187(2)
Summary
189(2)
8 Stepping Out
191(33)
From Dreams to Reality
191(1)
EVA from the Shuttle
192(1)
"The Wall"
193(5)
EVA at Space Station Freedom
198(5)
Building a Foundation for Scaling the Wall
203(2)
Safety at All Times
205(7)
The Ergonomics of EVA
212(11)
Summary
223(1)
9 From Inner To Outer Space
224(45)
Getting Wet
224(4)
Preparing the Hardware
228(1)
The Small Steps that Make a Walk
228(2)
Scaling the Wall
230(13)
STS-Supported EVAs at the ISS
243(23)
Summary
266(3)
10 Getting Back
269(77)
Undocking the Shuttle
270(8)
Coming Home
278(9)
The `What If Factor'
287(12)
Summary
299(2)
Closing Comments
301(5)
Afterword
306(2)
Abbreviations
308(6)
Appendices
314(24)
Bibliography
338(4)
About the Author
342(2)
Other Works by the Author
344(2)
Index 346
Dave Shayler has been following the shuttle operational story for over 30 years and in particular aspects of its relationship with space stations. He has presented numerous papers on the topic and has authored series of articles published by the BIS in support of this outreach program and research. This work includes:

 1991: The proposed USSR Salyut and US Shuttle Docking Mission circa 1981 (paper presented at the BIS Soviet Technical Forum 1991; paper published in JBIS 1991)  2000: American flights to Mir (Space shuttle) (published in BIS publication History of Mir; paper presented at BIS Soviet Technical Forum)  2002: NASA Shuttle missions to ISS (1998-2002) (published in BIS publication From Imagination to Reality: the ISS Volume 1)  2005: NASA Shuttle missions to ISS (2002-2005) (published in the BIS publication From Imagination to Reality: the ISS Volume 2)  Unpublished: NASA Shuttle missions to ISS (2005-2011)

He joined theBIS in January 1976 and has participated in numerous activities, programs and projects including chairing meetings, working on committees and contributing to society publications. Dozens of his articles have appeared in BIS publications since 1977. He created Astro Info Service in October 1982 to focus his space writing and research, with lectures and educational outreach activities. Early publications included the periodicals ORBITER (on the Shuttle) and ZENIT (on Soviet activities), and a growing range of biographies on the world's space explorers. In 1990 he co-created the Midland Spaceflight Society and acts as its chairman. His first books were published in 1987 by Ian Allen and Salamander Books and since then over 20 titles have been authored including 13 titles in the Praxis Space Library between 2000 and 2009. He has also contributed to U. S. books and collections on human spaceflight including the three editions of Macmillans Whos Who in Space edited by Michael Cassutt. In2008 his authorised biography on Skylab astronaut Jerry Carr was published after 20 years research. Personal research has been conducted at NASA JSC in Houston and at KSC in Florida, as well as at Rice and Clear Lake Universities and NARA archives in Texas. His research has also allowed him to complete a fascinating and informative visit to Russia in 2003 visiting the Cosmonaut Training Center and other facilities around Moscow.