Space Shuttle NASA Mission Reports: 1990 Missions, STS-32, STS-36, STS-31, STS-41, STS-38, STS-35

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Science, Physics, Astronomy, Other Sciences, History
Cover of the book Space Shuttle NASA Mission Reports: 1990 Missions, STS-32, STS-36, STS-31, STS-41, STS-38, STS-35 by Progressive Management, Progressive Management
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Progressive Management ISBN: 9781465902207
Publisher: Progressive Management Publication: January 5, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Progressive Management
ISBN: 9781465902207
Publisher: Progressive Management
Publication: January 5, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

These official final program mission reports issued by the NASA Johnson Space Center cover missions in 1990: STS-32, STS-36, STS-31, STS-41, STS-38, and STS-35. In these thorough reports, with information and specifics not available on NASA website mission descriptions, each orbiter system is reviewed in detail along with technical information on performance and anomalies.

STS-32: The primary objective of this flight was to successfully deploy the SYNCOM IV-F5 satellite and to retrieve the Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) satellite, which had been placed in orbit on April 6, 1984, by the STS-41C mission. The crew for this thirty-third flight of the Space Shuttle was Daniel C. Brandenstein, Capt., USN, Commander; James D Wetherbee, Lt. Cdr., USN, Pilot; Bonnie J. Dunbar, Ph.D., Mission Specialist 1; Marsha S. Ivins, Mission Specialist 2; and G. David Low, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-36: The STS-36 mission was a classified Department of Defense mission. The crew for this thirty-fourth flight of the Space Shuttle was John O. Creighton, Capt., U.S. Navy, Commander; John H. Casper, Col. U. S. Air Force, Pilot; David C. Hilmers, Lt. Col., U. S. Marine Corps, Mission Specialist 1; Richard M. Mullane, Col., U. S. Air Force, Mission Specialist 2; and Pierre J. Thuot, Lt. Cdr., U. S. Navy, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-31: The primary objective of the mission was to place the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) into a 330 nmi. circular orbit having an inclination of 28.45 degrees. The crew for this thirty-fifth flight of the Space Shuttle was Loren J. Shriver, Commander; Charles F. Bolden, Pilot; Bruce McCandless, Mission Specialist 1; Steven A. Hawley, Mission Specialist 2; and Kathryn D. Sullivan, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-41: The primary objective of the STS-41 mission was to successfully deploy the Ulysses/inertial upper stage (IUS)/payload assist module (PAM-S) spacecraft. The crew for this thirty-sixth flight of the Space Shuttle was Richard N. Richards, Capt., USN, Commander; Robert D. Cabana, Lt. Col., USMC, Pilot; Bruce E. Melnick, Cmdr, USCG, Mission Specialist 1; William M. Shepard, Capt., USN, Mission Specialist 2; and Thomas D. Akers, Major, USAF, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-38: The STS-38 mission was a classified Department of Defense mission. The crew for this thirty-seventh flight of the Space Shuttle was Richard O. Covey, Col., USAF, Commander; Frank L. Culbertson, Capt., USN, Pilot; Charles D. Gemar, Capt., U.S. Army, Mission Specialist 1; Robert C. Springer, Col., USMC, Mission Specialist 2; and Carl J. Meade, Major, USAF, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-35: The primary objectives of this flight were to successfully perform the planned operations of the Ultraviolet Astronomy (Astro-1) payload and the Broad-Band X-Ray Telescope (BBXRT) payload in a 190-nmi. circular orbit which had an inclination of 28.45 degrees. The crew for this thirty-eighth flight of the Space Shuttle was Vance D. Brand, Commander; Guy S. Gardner, Colonel, USAF, Pilot; Jeffrey A. Hoffman, Ph.D, Mission Specialist 1; John M. Lounge, Mission Specialist 2; Robert A. Parker, Ph.D, Mission Specialist 3; and Samuel T. Durrance, Ph.D, and Ronald A. Parise, Ph.D., Payload Specialists.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

These official final program mission reports issued by the NASA Johnson Space Center cover missions in 1990: STS-32, STS-36, STS-31, STS-41, STS-38, and STS-35. In these thorough reports, with information and specifics not available on NASA website mission descriptions, each orbiter system is reviewed in detail along with technical information on performance and anomalies.

STS-32: The primary objective of this flight was to successfully deploy the SYNCOM IV-F5 satellite and to retrieve the Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) satellite, which had been placed in orbit on April 6, 1984, by the STS-41C mission. The crew for this thirty-third flight of the Space Shuttle was Daniel C. Brandenstein, Capt., USN, Commander; James D Wetherbee, Lt. Cdr., USN, Pilot; Bonnie J. Dunbar, Ph.D., Mission Specialist 1; Marsha S. Ivins, Mission Specialist 2; and G. David Low, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-36: The STS-36 mission was a classified Department of Defense mission. The crew for this thirty-fourth flight of the Space Shuttle was John O. Creighton, Capt., U.S. Navy, Commander; John H. Casper, Col. U. S. Air Force, Pilot; David C. Hilmers, Lt. Col., U. S. Marine Corps, Mission Specialist 1; Richard M. Mullane, Col., U. S. Air Force, Mission Specialist 2; and Pierre J. Thuot, Lt. Cdr., U. S. Navy, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-31: The primary objective of the mission was to place the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) into a 330 nmi. circular orbit having an inclination of 28.45 degrees. The crew for this thirty-fifth flight of the Space Shuttle was Loren J. Shriver, Commander; Charles F. Bolden, Pilot; Bruce McCandless, Mission Specialist 1; Steven A. Hawley, Mission Specialist 2; and Kathryn D. Sullivan, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-41: The primary objective of the STS-41 mission was to successfully deploy the Ulysses/inertial upper stage (IUS)/payload assist module (PAM-S) spacecraft. The crew for this thirty-sixth flight of the Space Shuttle was Richard N. Richards, Capt., USN, Commander; Robert D. Cabana, Lt. Col., USMC, Pilot; Bruce E. Melnick, Cmdr, USCG, Mission Specialist 1; William M. Shepard, Capt., USN, Mission Specialist 2; and Thomas D. Akers, Major, USAF, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-38: The STS-38 mission was a classified Department of Defense mission. The crew for this thirty-seventh flight of the Space Shuttle was Richard O. Covey, Col., USAF, Commander; Frank L. Culbertson, Capt., USN, Pilot; Charles D. Gemar, Capt., U.S. Army, Mission Specialist 1; Robert C. Springer, Col., USMC, Mission Specialist 2; and Carl J. Meade, Major, USAF, Mission Specialist 3.

STS-35: The primary objectives of this flight were to successfully perform the planned operations of the Ultraviolet Astronomy (Astro-1) payload and the Broad-Band X-Ray Telescope (BBXRT) payload in a 190-nmi. circular orbit which had an inclination of 28.45 degrees. The crew for this thirty-eighth flight of the Space Shuttle was Vance D. Brand, Commander; Guy S. Gardner, Colonel, USAF, Pilot; Jeffrey A. Hoffman, Ph.D, Mission Specialist 1; John M. Lounge, Mission Specialist 2; Robert A. Parker, Ph.D, Mission Specialist 3; and Samuel T. Durrance, Ph.D, and Ronald A. Parise, Ph.D., Payload Specialists.

More books from Progressive Management

Cover of the book Caribbean and Eastern Pacific Maritime Security: Regional Cooperation in Bridge and Insular States - Controlling Narcotics and Cocaine Smuggling, Narco-traffickers including Mexico and Central America by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Archaeology, Anthropology, and Interstellar Communication, History of SETI, Astrobiology, Extraterrestrial Intelligence and Space Aliens, Primer on Cosmology, Search for Radio Messages by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The Iran-Iraq War: Exceeding Means - Analysis of the Decision of Saddam Hussein to Invade Iran, Longest and Bloodiest War in Middle Eastern History, Ayatollah, Shia Unrest, Sunni, Bathist Regime by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Iran's Post-9/11 Grand Bargain: Missed Opportunity for Strategic Rapprochement Between Iran and the United States - History from the 1953 Coup, Hostage Crisis, Iran-Iraq War, Khomeini to Khamenei by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Incorporating Effects-Based Operations Into Military Operations: EBO Concepts and Categories, IO, Effects-based Coalition Operations, EBO Experimentation, Lessons from Coalition Operations by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Incident Response Pocket Guide and Wildland Urban Interface Wildfire Mitigation Desk Reference Guide: All-Hazard Response, Homeowner Fire Mitigation, Firewise Communities, Living with Fire by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century Nuclear Hydrogen Research and Development, Production of Hydrogen from Nuclear Energy for the Hydrogen Initiative, Feedstocks, High-Temperature Electrolysis (HTE), Fuel Cycle by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Islamic State (IS) Encyclopedia: America's War Against ISIS / ISIL Terrorists in Iraq and Syria, Leader al-Baghdadi, Levant, al-Qaeda in Syria, Obama's al-Qaida Counterterrorism Policy by Progressive Management
Cover of the book National Defense Intelligence College Paper: The Intelligence Archipelago - The Community's Struggle to Reform in the Globalized Era, History of Intelligence Reform, Investigations and Reports by Progressive Management
Cover of the book MARSOC: A Way Ahead - Marine Special Operations Command Proposal, USSOCOM, Culture Clash, Doctrine and Theory of Special Operations, Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Unity of Command by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century U.S. Military Manuals: U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) Marine Corps Supplement to the Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms (Value-Added Professional Format Series) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS): Joint Doctrine for Unmanned Aircraft Systems: The Air Force and the Army Hold the Key to Success (UAVs, Remotely Piloted Aircraft) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Identifying and Defeating Infiltration Threats to the Homeland: German Sabotage in World War II, al-Qaeda, False Iraqi Freedom Lessons, China Threats, Attack Scenarios, Counterintelligence Shortfalls by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Effects of the Subsurface Domain on the Security of the Korean Peninsula: North Korea's Korean People's Navy Submarine Undersea Threat to the Republic of Korea, South Korean Anti-Submarine Warfare by Progressive Management
Cover of the book FBI Report: Serial Murder, Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives for Investigators - From Jack the Ripper to the Beltway Sniper, Psychopathy, Motivations, Forensic Issues, Causality and Types by Progressive Management
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy