NASA: ATV ready to dock with ISS: Minute by Minute coverage

by Albert Milliron | April 3, 2008 at 06:02 am
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ESA Europe ATV SPACE TRUCK "TWIN" MINI SPACE STATION ART RENDERING

ESA Europe ATV SPACE TRUCK "TWIN" MINI SPACE STATION ART RENDERING

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uploaded by SOLARLIFE

NASA: ATV ready to dock with ISS:

 

April 3, 2008

Update 10:55 am

TOULOUSE, France, April 3 (UPI) -- The European Space Agency's Jules Verne automated transfer vehicle spacecraft was successfully docked Thursday with the International Space Station.

The incremental docking procedure was completed at 10: 45 a.m. EDT, the first for an ESA spacecraft and the most demanding of seven planned ATV missions to resupply the space station, the ESA said.

The spacecraft's automated movements were ordered by controllers at the ESA's ATV control center in Toulouse, France, with assistance from National Aeronautics and Space Administration ISS controllers in Houston and Russian space agency controllers near Moscow.

Update 10:47 am or 1407 hrs GMT -  Will will update as events dictate

update 10:46 am - ISS is near the Equater, a text book docking, clapping at NASA

update 10:45 am - contact

Update 10:44 am - standby for contact 2 meters

Update 10:44 am - ATV within 9 feet

Update 10:43 am - the ISS has control until 3 feet then ATV automatically docks.  There is an abort and destroy in place in case of accident

Update 10:42 am - Russian say go, NASA says Go

Update 10:41 am -  NASA TV online is broacasting this event live, European says go

Update 10:39 am - all three space agencies are going through, Go or no-go procedure

update 10:36 am - All is nominal, ATV is at 36 feet or 11 meters from ISS.  Final step

Update 10:34 am - This writer has noticed that an aditional step has been added, as the ATV will stop at 36 feet rather than 17 feet.  This next step is two mintues away

Update 10:33 am - European Space Agency states all is go.  The scheduled time for docking is a guideline.  Since this is the first docking of this vehicle, they are taking extra precautions.

Update 10:31 am - Final checklist through the Russian Space Agency

Update 10:30 am - ATV will come within 17 feet from Vehicle, The ISS is over the southern tip of South America

Update 10:28 am - ATV is in next to last phase.  Thrusters will be used here. 

Update 10:21 am- all go for final.  Will continue 7 minutes from now

Update 10:18 am - ATV is 62 Feet away from the ISS in a short hold. ATV is 21 minutes from scheduled docking. will begin moving again in 11 minute

Update 10:15 am - ISS audio, "all systems are nominal"

Update 10:13 am - the ISS is above the S. Pacific as the ATV is 70 Meters away in a hold

Update 10:07 am - The ATV is 7 minutes from it's next hold point

The Automated Transfer Vehicle is about 14 minutes to docking with the International Space Station.  The docking procedure is a bit dangerous so the Flight Crew has a destruct mechanism close in hand in case anythng goes wrong.

Europe's Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) "Jules Verne" is in the final stages of docking with the International Space Station (ISS), scheduled for 14:41 GMT - though this may be delayed 15 minutes.

Following nearly a month of on orbit operations - including two successful demonstration days, controllers in France, the United States and Russia will carefully monitor the unmanned vehicle, along with its five tons of cargo, as it docks with the Station for the first time.

Automated Transfer Vehicle

The International Space Station Mission Management Team has given the official “go” for Thursday’s docking of the Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) to the aft port of the station’s Zvezda Service Module at 10:41 a.m. EDT.

However, Russian controllers may request a slightly longer stationkeeping by the ATV at the 62-foot-point from the Service Module. This will enable specialists to assess lighting conditions after what was seen during Monday's practice maneuvers.

Jules Verne is the first fully automated resupply spacecraft to travel to the station. It will bring eight tons of cargo and remain docked until August.

To prepare for the coming of the ATV, Expedition 16 crew members spent time Wednesday reviewing their procedures associated with any off-nominal occurrences during docking.

Commander Peggy Whitson and Flight Engineer Yuri Malenchenko also began packing for their upcoming departure from the station in just over two weeks.

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Amy Judd
Amy Judd
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:22 on April 3rd, 2008

politisite, I like this story. 

Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:19 on April 3rd, 2008

Great work.

PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:24 on April 3rd, 2008

politisite,good stuff, except I'm not sure why you said it might be destroyed. huh? They did two approaches, as planned, to test the anti-collison avoidance system, as planned. As far as I know, the module wasn't in any danger of being destroyed. What did I miss?

0
PEP

politisite, are you talking about the planned destruction after it becomes a garbage scow?

0
Albert Milliron

Here is what happened, I think... I mixed it up with another story.  I know your shocked but I made a mistake.  Like I tell everyone, "make sure you have more than one source".  I read these and thought it was speaking of todays docking.  This was about launch and 6 months following the mission.  There was also a problem where a destruct may have been used but they were able to rework the problem. 

"Given this launch involves the first Ariane 5 second stage re-ignition, back-up plans are in place should this fail. This would lead to either a controlled re-entry to destroy the stricken ATV, or possibly salvaging the mission."

The ATV will remain docked to the ISS for nearly six months, before separating and making a guided reentry and disintegrating in the atmosphere.

Sorry guys / girl

0
PEP

Houston communications sometimes, I think, fail to fully explain things to non-space(y) people. They throw those terms around without noting that having an abort/destroy option for a docking spacecraft is routine. Just as having an abort/destroy procedure for unmanned rocket liftoffs such as the Ariane is routine. I've been around when they've had to destroy an unmanned U.S. rocket, big fireworks!     ;}

It's not a biggie, the not filling in the gaps that Houston should have in their chatter.  As my wrist is hurting, I shall skip the homily on why abort/destroy routines are necessary for any unmanned craft docking with the ISS. Let's just say that you can't call Triple A in case of a fender bender!

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Albert Milliron

This is why NowPublic is the way of the future.  You are an expert on NASA.  Most people would never have picked up my mistake.  We have fact checkers here that call the mistakes.  I do it with politics.  If a writer wants to hide, NP is not the place.  Thanks for you keeping me on track

SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:31 on April 3rd, 2008

politisite, I like this story. It's good stuff. The schedule is very interesting

14:59 GMT ROBOT SPACE TRUCK DOCKS WITH ISS WITHOUT PROBLEMS;
PICTURE SHOWS POSSIBLE EUROPEAN MINI SPACE STATION

0
Albert Milliron

Thank You for powering this story

Al

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