STS-72
STS-72 was a Space Shuttle Endeavour mission to capture and return to Earth a Japanese microgravity research spacecraft known as Space Flyer Unit. The mission launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida on 11 January 1996.
Crew
Crew seat assignments
Spacewalks
- Chiao and Barry – EVA 1
- EVA 1 Start: 15 January 1996 – 05:35 UTC
- EVA 1 End: 15 January – 11:44 UTC
- Duration: 6 hours, 9 minutes
- Chiao and Scott – EVA 2
- EVA 2 Start: 17 January 1996 – 05:40 UTC
- EVA 2 End: 17 January – 12:34 UTC
- Duration: 6 hours, 54 minutes
Mission highlights
OAST-Flyer
The STS-72 mission also flew with the Office of Aeronautics and Space Technology Flyer spacecraft. OAST-Flyer was the seventh in a series of missions aboard the reusable free-flying Spartan carrier spacecraft series. It consisted of four experiments: Return Flux Experiment to test accuracy of computer models predicting spacecraft exposure to contamination; Global Positioning System Attitude Determination and Control Experiment to demonstrate GPS technology in space; Solar Exposure to Laser Ordnance Device to test laser ordnance devices; Spartan Packet Radio Experiment and the Amateur Radio Association at the University of Maryland amateur radio communications experiment. On flight day four, Wakata again operated Endeavour's robot arm to deploy the Spartan, sending the experiment-laden platform on its way to a 50-hour free-flight at a distance of approximately 45 miles from the orbiter. OAST-Flyer was retrieved on flight day six, with Wakata again operating the remote manipulator system arm to retrieve the platform.Spacewalks
Two 6.5-hour spacewalks were conducted by three astronauts to test hardware and tools to be used in the assembly of the International Space Station starting in late 1998. EVA-1 on flight day five consisted of Crewmembers Leroy Chiao and Dan Barry. After taking a few minutes to acclimate themselves in the payload bay, first-time spacewalkers Chiao and Barry attached a portable work platform to the end of the robot arm, operated by Pilot Brent Jett and Mission Specialist Koichi Wakata. Jett used the arm to grapple various pieces of hardware designed to hold large modular components, mimicking the way equipment boxes and avionics gear will be moved back and forth in assembling the Space Station.Chiao and Barry then unfolded a cable tray diagonally across the forward portion of the cargo bay housing simulated electrical and fluid lines similar to those which would later connect modules and nodes of the Space Station. The rigid umbilical, as it is known, was tested for its ease of handling and the ability of the astronauts to hook up the lines to connectors on the side of Endeavour's bay. While Chiao unraveled various lengths of cable from a caddy device, Barry spent time practicing the hookup of the various cables in the rigid umbilical to connectors in the bay, testing his ability to manipulate tiny bolts and screws in weightlessness. He reported that most tasks could be accomplished with little difficulty. Barry and Chiao then traded places, as Barry mounted the portable work platform to evaluate its worth. The first EVA lasted 6 hours, 9 minutes. EVA-2 on Flight Day 7 consisted of Leroy Chiao and Winston Scott, lasting 6 hours, 53 minutes. Chiao and Scott worked with utility boxes, slidewires and a portable work stanchion affixed to Endeavour's robot arm to gather additional data on methods and procedures which would be incorporated in the techniques used to assemble the International Space Station. Late in the spacewalk, Scott climbed into foot restraints on the OAST-Flyer satellite platform for a thermal evaluation exercise. Endeavour was maneuvered to the coldest position possible, with its payload bay facing out toward deep space and allowing temperatures to dip to about 104 degrees below zero at the point where Scott was positioned to test the ability of his spacesuit to repel the bitter cold temperature of space.
Additional payloads
Other experiments onboard STS-72 included the Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Experiment , EDFT-03, Shuttle Laser Altimeter Payload, VDA-2, National Institutes of Health NIH-R3 Experiment, Space Tissue Loss Experiment, Pool Boiling Experiment and the Thermal Energy Storage experiment.Get Away Special payloads included the United States Air Force Academy G-342 Flexible Beam Experiment, Society of Japanese Aerospace Companies' G-459 – Protein Crystal Growth Experiment and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory GAS Ballast Can with Sample Return Experiment.
Documentary
The crew of STS-72 and their families were followed by a camera crew from PBS from the day they were assigned to the flight and then through their training and, finally, the mission itself. The result was a 90-minute documentary narrated by Bill Nye titled Astronauts which first aired on PBS on 17 July 1997 and was later released on VHS home video.In December 2020, photographer John Angerson released unseen photos of mission preparation.