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SST-118 - Endeavour Mission to the Space Station
The trip in Pictures
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During the flight of SST 118, I collected these pictures from NASA's news releases on their website.

ommander Scott Kelly climbs into the cockpit of the Shuttle Training Aircraft to prepare for landing practice. The training aircraft is a modified Gulf Stream II jet that was designed to simulate an orbiter's cockpit and landing qualities.

Evac Training
The crew listsns to the trainier explaining how to use the slidewire basket

Mission Specialist Alvin Drew takes a turn driving an M-113 armored personnel carrier as his passengers, Mission Specialists Barbara R. Morgan and Dave Williams, enjoy the ride. A member of the astronaut rescue team is on board to instruct the crew members in operating the M-113 vehicle. Morgan is a teacher-turned- astronaut whose association with NASA began more than 20 years ago and Williams represents the Canadian Space Agency.

The Second Educator Astronaut looks on as Jennier Haas, 17, explains the workings of a rover model she built as part of a Space Camp event.

A worker checks the movement of Endeavour's payload doors as it closes

Lit by the dawn sky over the Atlantic Ocean, Space Shuttle Endeavour sits on Launch Pad 39A. Endeavour is scheduled to launch on mission STS-118, its first mission since 2002. During the mission, Endeavour will carry into orbit the S5 truss, SPACEHAB module and external stowage platform 3

Endeavour on the Pad

The STS-118 astronauts arrived at Kennedy Space Center to take part in the terminal countdown demonstration test, a full launch dress rehearsal that typically takes place a few weeks prior to liftoff. Space Shuttle Endeavour Commander Scott Kelly welcomed the media and introduced his crew. From left are Mission Specialists Alvin Drew, Barbara R. Morgan, Dave Williams, Rick Mastracchio, Tracy Caldwell and Pilot Charlie Hobaugh. This launch will be the first for Endeavour in more than four years

Mission Specialist Barbara R. Morgan gets the fit of her launch-and-entry suit checked by a technician as part of the prelaunch preparations. Every astronaut is custom fitted with an orange flight suit and helmet. Each pressurized suit contains an emergency oxygen system, parachute pack, life raft, water, radio/beacon and other survival gear in the unlikely event of an emergency.

The STS-118 crew members wave to the crowd of Kennedy employees and media as they walk toward NASA's specially designed van. The silver "Astrovan" will take them on a 20-minute trip to Launch Pad 39A

In the White Room on Launch Pad 39A, the closeout crew prepares the launch-and-entry suit for Pilot Charlie Hobaugh before he climbs into the orbiter to participate in a simulated countdown exercise. The White Room is at the outer end of the orbiter access arm that allows personnel to enter the orbiter crew compartment. The arm remains in the extended position until seven minutes, 24 seconds before launch to serve as an emergency escape route for the flight crew if necessary.

Drew(foreground) waits for launch as a tech helps Williams into his seat in the mid-deck of the shuttle as the crew prepared for launch

As billows of smoke spread across Launch Pad 39A, Space Shuttle Endeavour climbs into the sky on mission STS-118

Heading to Space

Spectators watching the launch

Cameras watched the shuttle during launch

On orbit, showing a few of the SPACEHAB pressurized logistics module

Teacher-astronaut Barbara Morgan, backup to Kristie in 1986, smiles while working on the middeck of Endeavour

Getting ready to dock with the Space Station

The Station Crew check out the Shuttle

Rick Mastraccio hams it up for the camera while waiting in the Quest Airlock

Dave Williams, a Canadian, does the same...

Rick Mastrachchio out on the space walk

Mastracchio prepares a beverage in the galley on the middeck of Space Shuttle Enndeavour

Backdropped by Earth's Horizon, Endeavour is docked to the Space Station

Canadarm2 and solar array wings are featured in this shot during the first EVA

Damage found on underbelly tiles

Barbara Morgan and Tracy Caldwell work the controls for the arm inspecting the damaged tiles

Materials Experiment on the Space Station.  The experiment collects information on how the different materials react to the environment of space

The new control movement Gyroscope

Mastracchio, though a window in ISS during the spacewalk

Williams being carried by Canadarm2 during the second spacewalk

Earth's horizon behind Endeavour's tail

Docked, and on orbit

Working in Space.  Canadian Space Agency's astronaut Dave Williams (left) and astronaut Rick Mastracchio (center), both STS-118 mission specialists, participate in the mission's second EVA

Astronaut Clay Anderson takes a picture of his visor reflection.

Press Conference.
The Expedition 15 and STS-118 crewmembers assemble in the Destiny laboratory on the International Space Station to greet and answer questions from news media representatives on the ground. ISS crewmembers on the front row, from the left: astronaut Clayton C. Anderson, flight engineer; along with cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin, commander; and Oleg Kotov, flight engineer, both with Russia's Federal Space Agency. STS-118 crew members on the middle row, from the left: astronauts Alvin Drew, Barbara R. Morgan and the Canadian Space Agency's Dave Williams, all mission specialists, along with Scott Kelly, commander. STS-118 crewmembers on the back row, from the left: astronaut Charlie Hobaugh, pilot, along with astronauts Rick Mastracchio and Tracy Caldwell, both mission specialists.

Astronaut Tracy Caldwell brushes her hair on the middeck of the Space Shuttle

Outside Working
Astronaut Dave Williams, STS-118 mission specialist representing the Canadian Space Agency, participates in the mission's fourth and final session of extravehicular activity (EVA) as construction and maintenance continue on the International Space Station. During the 5-hour spacewalk, Williams and astronaut Clay Anderson (out of frame), Expedition 15 flight engineer, installed the External Wireless Instrumentation System antenna, attached a stand for the shuttle's robotic arm extension boom and retrieved the two Materials International Space Station Experiments (MISSE) to be brought back on the shuttle.

Astronaut Scott Kelly, STS-118 commander, pauses for a photo in the Zvezda Service Module, which is the oldest section of the International Space Station

The Shuttle's view of Cat 4 Hurricane Dean in the Caribbean.  Mission managers decided to bring the shuttle home one day early to avoid Dean's threat to mission control during flight operations.

Leaving the station, the Shuttle got a nice view of the progress that's been made so far

In the space shuttle flight operations control room of Houston's Mission Control Center, STS-118 ascent flight director Steve Stich watches over the situation as the Space Shuttle Endeavour flies in orbit.

Astronauts Chris Ferguson (left) and Jim Dutton, spacecraft communicators (CAPCOM), monitor data at their consoles in the space shuttle flight control room of Johnson Space Center's Mission Control Center (MCC).

Endeavour kicks up dust as it touches down on runway 15 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center. The Space Shuttle Endeavour crew, led by Commander Scott Kelly, completes a 13-day mission to the International Space Station.

The open drag chute helps slow Endeavour as it lands on runway 15 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center.


             

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