Nice view of the strobe beacon. *white* *black* *white* *black* *white* *black* :lol:
FRIDAY, MAY 25, 2012
0911 GMT (5:11 a.m. EDT)
NASA astronaut Don Pettit will man the station's robot arm during this morning's capture of the Dragon spacecraft. European Space Agency flight engineer Andre Kuipers will assist Pettit at the controls of the arm in the station's windowed cupola.
"We've been doing quite a bit of training, particularly oriented towards the crew role, which is flying the robotic arm and capturing the SpaceX vehicle when it gets in a holding pattern near space station," Pettit said. "Then the arm will maneuver the Dragon vehicle to one of our docking ports, then we'll fasten it to station, and then we can go about outfitting the vestibule and opening the hatch."
Hatch opening is scheduled for Saturday morning, following Dragon's capture at 7:59 a.m. EDT (1159 GMT) and berthing about four hours later.
"That whole process is going to be a long day for us," Pettit said. "It's going to be 10 hours plus to get all of that done. If we have a few hitches on the way, we may have to put it all on hold and pick it up the next day."
Dragon will become the only operational cargo vehicle with the ability to return equipment from the space station to Earth.
"If all of that happens according to plan, it will be great to have significant payload down capability once again," Pettit said. "Everybody talks about getting payload up to station, but one of thing that's sorely missing in the wake of the shuttle retirement is getting payload back down. We have all kinds of useful things that we want to get back down to Earth but currently don't really have a way to get them back down."
"Currently, we have no way to get our frozen samples back. Crucial to the life science experiments that we are doing on space station, particularly the human physiology experiments," Pettit said. "We have blood, urine, and spit samples, we have all these things frozen in our freezers ... and there down at minus-95 to minus-98 Centigrade. these samples have to remain frozen all the way to the laboratory to where they're going to be analyzed. Currently, Dragon will be the only way to get these samples back to Earth, and that will allow the science behind all our human physiology [experiments] to continue."
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