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The Mission




Orbiter: Discovery
Mission: STS-124
Payload: Kibo lab
Launch: May 31, 2008
Time: 5:02 p.m. EDT
Site: Pad 39A, Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Landing: June 14 @ approx. 11:15 a.m. EDT
Site: Shuttle Landing Facility, KSC

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The Crew




Meet the astronauts flying aboard Discovery's STS-124 mission.

Meet the Astronauts

CDR: Mark Kelly

PLT: Ken Ham

MS 1: Karen Nyberg

MS 2: Ron Garan

MS 3: Mike Fossum

MS 4: Akihiko Hoshide

Up: Greg Chamitoff

Down: Garrett Reisman

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Video archive

Discovery rolls out

Discovery travels from the Vehicle Assembly Building to pad 39A in preparation for the STS-124 mission.

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STS-124: The programs

In advance of shuttle Discovery's STS-124 mission to the station, managers from both programs discuss the flight.

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STS-124: The mission

A detailed preview of Discovery's mission to deliver Japan's science laboratory Kibo to the station is provided in this briefing.

 Part 1 | Part 2

STS-124: Spacewalks

Three spacewalks are planned during Discovery's STS-124 assembly mission to the station.

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STS-124: The Crew

The Discovery astronauts, led by commander Mark Kelly, meet the press in the traditional pre-flight news conference.

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More video



Astronauts board Discovery for countdown rehearsal
BY WILLIAM HARWOOD
STORY WRITTEN FOR CBS NEWS "SPACE PLACE" & USED WITH PERMISSION
Posted: May 9, 2008

The crew of the shuttle Discovery strapped in today for a dress-rehearsal countdown that sets the stage for launch May 31 on a long-awaited flight to deliver Japan's huge Kibo laboratory module to the international space station.


Credit: NASA-KSC
 
Commander Mark Kelly, pilot Kenneth Ham, flight engineer Ronald Garan, Karen Nyberg, Michael Fossum, Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide and space station flight engineer Gregory Chamitoff began boarding the shuttle at pad 39A shortly after 8:15 a.m. The practice countdown ended at 11 a.m. with the simulated ignition and shutdown of the ship's main engines.

Shuttle program managers plan to hold a two-day flight readiness review May 13 and 14, followed by an executive-level review May 19. If all goes well, Kelly and company will fly back to the Kennedy Space Center on May 28 for the 7 p.m. start of their countdown to launch.

Liftoff currently is targeted for 5:02:09 p.m. on May 31, but that date depends in part on the delivery of replacement equipment needed by a NASA-supplied carbon dioxide removal system on the station. NASA wants to replace one of two CO2-scrubbing "beds" in the device that has been experiencing slightly higher pressures than usual.

The new component must be delivered to the Kennedy Space Center by May 28 to permit an on-time launch.

"We recently made a decision that we were going to go ahead and manifest another of the carbon dioxide removal assembly beds," space station Program Manager Mike Suffredini said last week. "We've changed out the two beds on what we refer to as the CDRA, we did that because of a design flaw that allowed some of the zeolites to leak around the screen on the bed and it was contaminating some of the valves.

"It turns out one of the beds we installed, the pressure has been rising on it over the last few months and it's not a condition that we expected to see. These are the beds, the same design beds, that are going to be in the second CDRA that we intend to fly to support a six-person crew, and so we need to understand the cause of this anomaly. While the CDRA actually does work, we're going to go ahead and R-and-R this bed and bring the old bed home so we can understand the root cause of this failure and if any other design mods are necessary."

On Thursday, NASA managers agreed to extend shuttle mission STS-124 by one day to give the crew time to replace spacesuit battery chargers in the station's Quest airlock module that are nearing the end of their operational lifetimes. The work will be done after Fossum and Garan complete three planned spacewalks.

Flight planners initially planned to insert the extra day as a new flight day 11, but they later decided to move the battery charger work up one day to flight day 10. Assuming an on-time launch on May 31, Discovery will return to Earth on June 14.

Spaceflight Now Plus
Additional coverage for subscribers:
VIDEO: ASTRONAUTS PRACTICE EVACUATION OF SHUTTLE PLAY
VIDEO: CREW BOARDS DISCOVERY FOR PRACTICE COUNTDOWN PLAY
VIDEO: TRAINING SESSIONS AT LAUNCH PAD AND BUNKER PLAY
VIDEO: CREW NEWS CONFERENCE AT LAUNCH PAD 39A PLAY
VIDEO: ASTRONAUTS ARRIVE FOR PRACTICE COUNTDOWN PLAY

VIDEO: TIME-LAPSE OF GANTRY ENCLOSING DISCOVERY PLAY
VIDEO: PAD'S ORBITER ACCESS ARM SWUNG INTO POSITION PLAY
VIDEO: TIME-LAPSE OF CRAWLER RETREATING AFTER ROLLOUT PLAY
VIDEO: SHUTTLE DISCOVERY ROLLED TO PAD 39A PLAY

VIDEO: SHUTTLE AND STATION PROGRAM BRIEFING PLAY
VIDEO: STS-124 MISSION OVERVIEW PART 1 | PART 2
VIDEO: PREVIEW BRIEFING ON MISSION'S SPACEWALKS PLAY
VIDEO: THE ASTRONAUTS' PRE-FLIGHT NEWS BRIEFING PLAY

VIDEO: KIBO LABORATORY TRAVELS TO THE LAUNCH PAD PLAY
VIDEO: TRANSPORT CANISTER WITH KIBO ROTATED UPRIGHT PLAY
VIDEO: CRANE PLACES KIBO MODULE INTO TRANSPORT CANISTER PLAY

VIDEO: DISCOVERY HOISTED FOR ATTACHMENT TO FUEL TANK PLAY
VIDEO: THE SHUTTLE MOVES TO THE VEHICLE ASSEMBLY BUILDING PLAY
MORE: STS-124 VIDEO COVERAGE
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