Updated 3 p.m. CDT, Friday, April 29, 2005
The new crew members of the International Space Station
completed their first full work week today as they conducted
routine maintenance, continued to settle in and practiced
photography to be used when the Space Shuttle returns to
flight.
Commander Sergei Krikalev and Flight Engineer and NASA Science
Officer John Phillips were given time each day to orient themselves
with the Station and where items are stowed. They also completed an
emergency evacuation drill, a standard procedure for all new crews.
The practice helps them learn the location of emergency equipment
and departure routes.
Both crewmembers kept
busy with Station maintenance and upkeep. Krikalev conducted
troubleshooting of the Russian Elektron oxygen generation system
and the condensate removal system. The Elektron remains off-line,
with oxygen being supplied from tanks in the Progress cargo ship,
one of several oxygen supplies available. The next infusion of
oxygen into the Station’s atmosphere from Progress will take
place early next week.
Krikalev also completed the transfer of water from the Progress
cargo ship to storage tanks in the Zvezda module. Phillips updated
the Station’s computer system with software specifically
designed for this crew’s mission. He also installed a
remote-controlled camera at the Destiny Lab’s Earth-facing
window for a week’s worth of imagery from the EarthKAM
experiment, which enables middle-school students around the world
to take photos of selected sites on Earth. Thousands of students
from more than 100 schools took part in this week’s
operations.
Early Friday Krikalev and Phillips were informed that NASA
managers rescheduled the launch of the Shuttle Discovery to no
earlier than July 13 on the STS-114 Return to Flight mission. The
additional time is needed to complete a thorough analysis of the
potential risks posed by several areas of possible ice debris from
the Shuttle’s external fuel tank as well as an evaluation of
several concerns found during recent launch preparations.

Today the crewmembers practiced with digital cameras the
photographs they will take of Discovery as it approaches the
Station for docking on the third day of the STS-114 mission.
Phillips and Krikalev will have about 93 seconds of time available
to use the cameras and high-power lenses to capture two sets of
images of the Shuttle’s heat shield. Discovery Commander
Eileen Collins will guide the Shuttle through a slow back flip to
allow the Station crew to image both the top and bottom of the
vehicle. The images will be quickly transmitted to the ground for
analysis.
Krikalev and Phillips performed another step in preparations for
the Shuttle visit this week as they cleared cargo from a hatch in
the Unity module where a cargo container will be attached during
that mission. The Station crew also conferred via space to ground
communications with Discovery’s crew about the planned
transfer and stowing of supplies.

Meanwhile, Expedition 10 Commander Leroy Chiao and Flight
Engineer Salizhan Sharipov, along with European Space Agency
Astronaut Roberto Vittori of Italy, arrived at the Gagarin
Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia Monday morning. They
rested, reunited with their families and went through medical tests
following their landing in a Soyuz spacecraft. Chiao and Sharipov
are expected to return to Houston in mid-May.