STS-123 Coming To A Close
Endeavour’s crew
completed additional inspections of the space shuttle’s heat
shield using the Orbital Boom Sensor System (OBSS) Friday. The
detailed inspection performed by Commander Dom Gorie, Pilot Greg
Johnson and Mission Specialist Takao Doi included up-close
examinations of the shuttle’s thermal protection system,
including the reinforced carbon-carbon panels on the leading edges
of the shuttle’s wings as well as the nose cap of the
orbiter.
Ground teams will closely examine the imagery and data collected
by the OBSS scan to ensure one last time that Endeavour’s
heat-resistant tiles are safe for re-entry.
This inspection is typically completed after the shuttle has
undocked from the space station, but because the crew will stow the
OBSS on board the station during the fifth and final spacewalk of
the mission tomorrow, the inspection was completed earlier. The
OBSS will be stowed on the station in preparation for
Discovery’s flight in May due to the size of the Japanese
pressurized Kibo module it will be carrying. Once Discovery’s
crew installs that module on the station, it will pick up the OBSS
left behind by Endeavour and will bring it back to Earth after
performing inspections.

The crew also continued transfers of cargo and equipment between
the shuttle and the station. Friday night, astronauts Bob Behnken
and Mike Foreman began the campout period inside the
station’s Quest airlock to purge the nitrogen out of their
bodies. This was completed in advance of Saturday’s
spacewalk, which was scheduled to last 6.5 hours.
Mission Specialists Robert L. Behnken and Mike Foreman began the
fifth spacewalk of STS-123 at 4:34 p.m. EDT. Rick Linnehan, also a
mission specialist, is coordinating their activities from inside
the orbiting complex made up of space shuttle Endeavour and the
International Space Station.

Behnken and Foreman have successfully attached the Orbiter Boom
Sensor System (OBSS) to the station’s S1 Truss. With the OBSS
in the grip of the station’s robot arm earlier, the two
spacewalkers assembled an umbilical designed to keep the boom safe
while it is stored in the harsh space environment. Then, the robot
arm handed the OBSS off to Behnken and Foreman to be placed on
S1.
The next component of the Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency’s Kibo laboratory, which will be delivered on space
shuttle Discovery during the STS-124 mission, is too large to
accommodate the OBSS in the shuttle’s payload bay. Once the
next element of Kibo is installed on the station, Discovery’s
astronauts will detach the OBSS left behind by space shuttle
Endeavour, use it to perform tile inspections and bring it
home.
In addition, the spacewalkers have successfully installed the
Materials International Space Station Experiment 6 on the outside
of the European Space Agency’s Columbus laboratory, an
activity the astronauts were unable to complete during the
mission’s third spacewalk. They also will perform other tasks
including an inspection of the starboard Solar Alpha Rotary
Joint.

With the final STS-123 spacewalk complete, flight day 14 will
see the crew of Endeavour prepare for the end of their visit to the
station. The orbiter will undock Monday and return to Earth
Wednesday.