NASA Facts Space Shuttle Discovery STS-120
NASA Facts Space Shuttle Discovery STS-120
Space shuttle Discovery’s upcoming 14-day mission, designated STS-120, will take
into orbit a connecting module that will increase the International Space Station’s inte-
rior space. Node 2, known as Harmony, will provide attachment points for European
and Japanese laboratory modules, to be installed later this year and early next year,
respectively. The shuttle also will deliver a new crew member and bring back another
one after a five-month mission. The Discovery crew will move the station’s P6 truss
segment and arrays to their permanent position at the very end of the left side of the
station’s backbone, or truss. The arrays have been attached to the middle of the truss
for the past seven years, acting as a temporary power system. There are five space-
walks scheduled, including one to evaluate a shuttle tile repair technique. (For more
details, see Press Kit, p.1)
CREW (Press Kit, p. 17)
The STS-120 patch reflects the role of the mission in the future of the space program. The shuttle payload bay
carries Harmony, the station’s doorway to the future international laboratories. The star on the left represents the
station; the red points represent the current location of the P6 solar array. The gold points represent the P6 solar
array in its new location, unfurled and producing power for science and life support. On the right, the moon and
Mars can be seen representing the future of NASA. The constellation Orion rises in the background, symbolizing
NASA's new exploration vehicle. Through all, the shuttle rises up and away, leading the way to the future.
Spacewalks: Each will last approximately 6.5 hours. (Press Kit, p. 51)
• On flight day 4, Wheelock, riding on the station’s robotic arm, will remove the S-band Antenna Structural
Assembly from the Z1 truss and deliver it to Discovery’s payload bay for return to Earth. Wheelock and Pa-
razynski will work in the bay to prepare Harmony for removal. Once complete, the station’s arm will take
Harmony from the shuttle and begin moving it toward its position on Unity. Next, Parazynski will transfer
ammonia fluid lines from the P6 truss to Z1.
• On flight day 6, with the station’s arm grabbing P6, Parazynski and Tani will disconnect cables, grounding
straps and bolts from the truss to remove it from Z1. The robotic arm then will remove P6 for relocation.
Tani will prepare the radiator on S1 truss to be deployed from the ground later. He will then re-route electri-
cal lines for P6 once it’s re-installed. The astronauts will work on external outfitting of Harmony.
• On flight day 8, Parazynski and Wheelock will assist with the robotic arm attachment of P6 in its new loca-
tion on P5. Parazynski will prepare the P6 radiator for deployment from the ground later. He then will recon-
figure electrical connectors that allowed the ground to deploy the S1 radiators earlier in the mission.
• On flight day 10, Parazynski and Wheelock will evaluate the Shuttle Tile Ablator-54, or STA-54, material
and a tile repair ablator dispenser for use as a space shuttle thermal protection system repair technique.
The Tile Repair Ablator Dispenser, or T-RAD, is similar to a caulk-gun. Parazynski will use T-RAD to mix
and squirt out the STA-54 material into holes in several demonstration tiles. The repaired samples will be
return to Earth for extensive testing.
• On flight day 11, Expedition 16 crew members Peggy Whitson and Yuri Malenchenko will prepare for the
permanent installation of Harmony on the Pressurized Mating Adapter-2. They also will transfer tools
needed for future spacewalks.
Figure 1: a detailed view of Harmony Figure 2: space station configuration after STS-120