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Boeing-built
Components Advance International Space Station Assembly
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 14,
2006
ISS
Assembly Mission 12A
Credit:
NASA
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This month's scheduled
Space Shuttle Atlantis STS-115 mission resumes assembly of the
International Space Station (ISS) with delivery of the Boeing
[NYSE: BA] Port 3/Port 4 (P3/P4) truss segment and two
power-producing solar arrays. STS-115 is the first assembly
mission since November 2002.
"Boeing is responsible for
sustainment, integration, the operations element and development
of the truss systems and most of the on-board mechanical
systems," said Joy Bryant, Boeing vice president and ISS
program manager. "We also are responsible for the
integration of the international elements."
The 34,885-pound truss is the
next major addition to the 11-segment integrated truss structure
that eventually will span more than 300 feet and carry power,
data and temperature control for the orbital outpost's
electronics. The ISS, when completed in 2010, will be equivalent
to a five-bedroom house, weigh almost a million pounds and
measure as long as a football field including the end zones.
The Atlantis crew will grab the
45-foot long by 15-foot wide truss from the payload bay with the
shuttle's robotic arm and pass it to the station's robotic arm,
which then will attach it to the P1 truss. P3/P4 will serve as an
attachment point for P5, which will fly on a shuttle flight in
December.
One of the unique elements of
P3/P4 is the Solar Alpha Rotary Joint, located between P3 and P4,
which rotates 360 degrees every 90 minutes to keep the solar
array wings oriented toward the Sun as the station orbits the
Earth.
"While waiting to launch
the P3/P4 cargo element, we've been diligent in maintaining the
flight hardware to ensure the vehicle's mechanical and electrical
systems work as designed when they reach the station," said
Chuck Hardison, Boeing ISS site manager at Kennedy Space Center
(KSC), Fla. "The entire team is excited about resuming
assembly operations."
Boeing designed P3 at
Huntington Beach, Calif. Boeing (now Pratt and Whitney)
Rocketdyne Power and Propulsion in Canoga Park, Calif., designed
P4. Assembly of P3 and P4 in Tulsa, Okla., started in 1997.
Boeing delivered P3 and P4 to the Space Station Processing
Facility at KSC in 1999 and 2000, respectively. The Boeing-led
team joined the components at KSC shortly thereafter. Major
subcontractors included Lockheed Martin, Honeywell and Hamilton
Sundstrand.
Because launch and installation
of the solar arrays and the batteries used to store power when
the station is in the Earth's shadow have been delayed so long,
the ISS team replaced the lower and upper deck batteries in 2005.
The new batteries will last eight to 10 years. NASA, Boeing and
Lockheed Martin, who built the solar arrays, conducted extensive
testing in July 2003 to ensure the arrays, which are stored in a
folded, accordion-style box, properly deploy once on orbit.
Source
/ Credit: The Boeing Company
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