STS-122 Landing Scheduled For Wednesday
The space shuttle Atlantis crew is expected to complete a 13-day
mission to the International Space Station with a landing at NASA's
Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday, February 20. Early Monday
morning, Atlantis undocked from the ISS, and set a course for
home.

"It's been an amazing experience for us," said Atlantis
commander Steve Frick, as his crew made their final goodbyes to
Expedition 16 commander Peggy Whitson and her Russian and French
crewmates. "It's been great having you here," replied a tearful
Whitson, reports The Houston Chronicle.
The STS-122 mission began February 7 and delivered the European
Space Agency's Columbus laboratory to the station. Columbus expands
the station's research facilities and provides scientists around
the world with the ability to conduct a variety of life, physical
and materials science experiments. The mission also included three
spacewalks, the delivery of a new crew member to the station and
the return of another astronaut after his nearly four month stay
aboard the complex.
NASA managers will evaluate weather conditions at Kennedy before
permitting Atlantis to return to Earth. Wednesday landing
opportunities at Kennedy are at 0907 and 1042 EST.
The space agency is under the gun -- literally -- to get
Atlantis back home, to clear the skies for a planned Pentagon
missile launch to destroy a defective spy satellite. While weather
conditions are expected to be favorable at KSC for the shuttle's
return, NASA also activated the backup landing site at Edwards Air
Force Base in California -- just to be safe.
There are additional landing opportunities at 1212 EST and 1347
EST at Edwards. The shuttle's other backup landing site, New
Mexico's White Sands Space Harbor, will not be activated
Wednesday.
Even as Atlantis left the ISS, NASA's next planned mission to
the station took another step forward. The space shuttle Endeavour
reached the launch pad Monday at 0445 EST Monday, and was secured
to the launch pad at 0622.
A full launch dress rehearsal, known as the terminal countdown
demonstration test, is scheduled to take place at Kennedy from
February 23 to 25.
Endeavour is targeted to launch March 11 on a 16-day mission to
the International Space Station. The shuttle's seven crew members
will deliver the first section of the Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency's Kibo laboratory and the Canadian Space Agency's two-armed
robotic system, Dextre. Five spacewalks will be conducted during
the flight.
Dominic Gorie will command the STS-123 mission. Gregory H.
Johnson will be the pilot. Robert L. Behnken, Mike Foreman, Rick
Linnehan, Garrett Reisman and Japanese astronaut Takao Doi make up
the rest of the crew. Reisman will remain on the station as a
resident crew member, replacing station Flight Engineer Leopold
Eyharts of the European Space Agency, who will return home on
Endeavour. Eyharts launched to the station with the STS-122 crew
February 7.

The STS-123 astronauts and ground crews will participate in the
terminal countdown demonstration test. The test provides each
shuttle crew with an opportunity to participate in various
simulated countdown activities, including equipment familiarization
and emergency training. STS-123 is the 122nd space shuttle flight,
the 21st flight for shuttle Endeavour and the 25th flight to the
station.