home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-05-02 | 109.2 KB | 2,556 lines |
-
-
-
-
- STS-50 PRESS KIT
-
- SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA
-
- USML-1 MISSION
-
- JUNE, 1992
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PUBLIC AFFAIRS CONTACTS
-
-
- Ed Campion
- Office of Space Flight
- NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
- (Phone: 202/453-8536)
-
- Michael Braukus
- Office of Space Science and Applications
- NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
- (Phone: 202/453-1547)
-
- Barbara Selby
- Office of Commercial Programs
- NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
- (Phone: 703/557-5609)
-
- Jane Hutchison
- Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif.
- (Phone: 415/604-9000)
-
- James Wilson
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
- (Phone: 818/354-5011)
-
- Lisa Malone
- Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
- (Phone: 407/867-2468)
-
- Jean Clough
- Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.
- (Phone: 804/864-6122)
-
- Mary Ann Peto
- Lewis Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio
- (Phone: 216/433-2899)
-
- June Malone/David Drachlis
- Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
- (Phone: 205/544-0034)
-
- James Hartsfield
- Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas
- (Phone: 713/483-5111)
-
-
-
-
-
- i
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- General Release 1
- STS-50 Quick Look Facts 2
- STS-50 Vehicle And Payload Weights 3
- STS-50 Trajectory Sequence Of Events 4
- Space Shuttle Abort Modes 5
- The U.S. Microgravity Laboratory-1 Mission 6
- Materials Science 10
- Crystal Growth Furnace Experiments 10
- Zeolite Crystal Growth 15
- Fluid Physics Experiments 18
- Astroculture (TM) 22
- Surface Tension Driven Convection Experiment (Stdce) 26
- Combustion Science Experiment 27
- Solid Surface Combustion Experiment (SSCE) 27
- Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) 28
- Biotechnology Experiments 31
- Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus 31
- Glovebox (GBX) 33
- Space Acceleration Measurement Systems (Sams) 42
- Extended Duration Orbiter Medical Project (Edomp) 42
- Investigations Into Polymer Membrane Processing (IPMP) 45
- Orbital Acceleration Research Experiment (OARE) 46
- Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment 46
- Sts-50 Prelaunch Processing 48
- STS-50 Crew Biographies 49
- Sts-50 Mission Management 41
- Shuttle Flights As Of May 1992 54
- STS-50 Launch Window Opportunities 55
-
-
-
-
- Release: 92-81
-
- 48th SHUTTLE MISSION TO BE LONGEST, FOCUS ON WEIGHTLESSNESS
-
-
- The longest flight ever for a Space Shuttle and around-
- the-clock investigations of the effects of weightlessness on
- plants, humans and materials will highlight Shuttle mission
- STS-50.
-
- The 48th flight of a Space Shuttle and the 12th flight of
- Columbia, STS-50, carrying the U.S. Microgravity Laboratory-1
- (USML-1), is planned for launching at 12:05 p.m. EDT on late
- June. The mission is scheduled to last 12 days, 20 hours and
- 28 minutes, with landing planned at Edwards Air Force Base,
- Calif.
-
- Richard N. Richards, 45, Capt., USN, will command STS-50,
- his third space flight. The pilot will be Kenneth D. Bowersox,
- 36, Lt. Cmdr., USN, making his first space flight. Mission
- specialists include Bonnie Dunbar, 43, who also will be Payload
- Commander and making her third flight; Ellen Baker, 39, making
- her second flight; and Carl Meade, 41, Col., USAF, making his
- second flight. Payload specialists include Lawrence J.
- DeLucas, 41, from the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography
- at the University of Alabama, making his first flight, and
- Eugene H. Trinh, 41, a research physicist on the Space Station
- Freedom experiments planning group, making his first flight.
-
- USML-1 includes 31 experiments ranging from manufacturing
- crystals for possible semiconductor use to the behavior of
- weightless fluids. In addition, STS-50 will carry the
- Investigations into Polymer Membrane Processing experiment, an
- experiment in manufacturing polymers, used as filters in many
- terrestrial industries, and the Space Shuttle Amateur Radio
- Experiment-II, an experiment that allows crew members to
- contact ham radio operators worldwide and conduct question-and-
- answer sessions with various schools.
-
- Columbia is currently the only Shuttle capable of a 13-day
- flight and will carry the necessary additional hydrogen and
- oxygen supplies on a pallet in the cargo bay. New systems for
- removing carbon dioxide from the crew cabin, for containing
- waste and for increased stowage of food and crew equipment also
- have been added.
-
- The crew will perform several ongoing medical
- investigations during the flight as well, research that aims at
- counteracting the effects of prolonged exposure to
- weightlessness on the human physique.
-
- - end of general release -
-
- STS-50 QUICK LOOK FACTS
-
-
- Orbiter: Columbia (OV-102)
-
- Launch Date and Time: Late June 1992
-
- Launch Window: 3 hours, 8 min. (12:05 - 3:13 p.m. EDT)
-
- Launch Site: Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Pad 39-A
-
- Altitude/Inclination: 160 n.m. x 160 n.m./28.5 degrees
-
- Mission Duration: 12/20:28:00 MET
-
- Primary Landing Site: Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
-
- Abort Landing Sites: Return to Launch Site - Kennedy Space
- Center, Fla.
- Transoceanic Abort Landing -
- Banjul, The Gambia
- Alternates - Ben Guerir, Morocco;
- Rota, Spain
- Abort Once Around - Edwards Air Force
- Base, Calif.
-
- Crew: Dick Richards, Commander
- Ken Bowersox, Pilot
- Bonnie Dunbar, Mission Specialist 1,
- Payload Commander
- Ellen Baker, Mission Specialist 2
- Carl Meade, Mission Specialist 3
- Larry DeLucas, Payload Specialist 1
- Gene Trinh, Payload Specialist 2
-
- Cargo Bay Payloads: U.S. Microgravity Laboratory-1 (USML-1)
- Crystal Growth Furnace (4 experiments)
- Drop Physics Module (3 experiments)
- Surface Tension Driven Convection
- Experiment
- Solid Surface Combustion Experiment
- Glovebox (16 experiments)
- Space Acceleration Measurement
- System(SAMS)
-
- Middeck Payloads: Astroculture-1 (ASC-1)
- Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus (GBA)
- Commercial Protein Crystal Growth
- (CPCG)
- Zeolite Crystal Growth (ZCG)
-
- Secondary Payloads: Extended Duration Orbiter Medical
- Project (EDOMP)
- Investigations into Polymer Membrane
- Processing (IPMP)
- Orbital Acceleration Research
- Experiment (OARE)
- Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment-II
- (SAREX-II)
- Ultraviolet Plume Instrument (UVPI)
-
- STS-50 Vehicle and Payload Weights
-
-
- Pounds
-
- Orbiter (Columbia) empty, and 3 Space Shuttle
- Main Engines 181,344
-
- U. S. Microgravity Laboratory 22,199
-
- Protein Crystal Growth 229
-
- Investigation of Polymer Membrane Processing 36
-
- Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment 52
-
- Zeolite Crystal Growth 126
-
- Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus 69
-
- Detailed Supplementary Objectives 248
-
- Detailed Test Objectives 122
-
- Extended Duration Orbiter Pallet 3,597
-
- Total Vehicle at Solid Rocket Booster Ignition 4,523,834
-
- Orbiter Landing Weight 228,866
-
-
-
- STS-50 TRAJECTORY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS
-
- RELATIVE
- MET VELOCITY ALTITUDE
- EVENT (d:h:m:s) (fps) MACH (ft)
-
-
- Launch 00/00:00:00
-
- Begin Roll Maneuver 00/00:00:10 189 .17 800
-
- End Roll Maneuver 00/00:00:14 301 .27 1,968
-
- SSME Throttle
- Down to 67% 00/00:00:35 842 .77 12,795
-
- Maximum Dyn.
- Pressure (Max Q) 00/00:00:51 1,178 1.13 27,314
-
- SSME Throttle Up
- to 104% 00/00:01:02 1,464 1.49 39,895
-
- SRB Separation 00/00:02:04 4,167 3.95 55,799
-
- Main Engine
- Cutoff (MECO) 00/00:08:31 24,572 22.73 63,636
-
- Zero Thrust 00/00:08:37 24,509 N/A 62,770
-
- External Tank
- Separation 00/00:08:50
-
- Orbital Maneuvering
- System-2 Burn 00/00:34:55
-
- Landing 12/20:28:00
-
-
- Apogee, Perigee at MECO: 156 x 35 nautical miles
-
- Apogee, Perigee post-OMS 2: 162 x 160 nautical miles
-
-
- SPACE SHUTTLE ABORT MODES
-
-
- Space Shuttle launch abort philosophy aims toward safe
- and intact recovery of the flight crew, orbiter and its
- payload. Abort modes include:
-
- - Abort-To-Orbit (ATO) -- Partial loss of main engine thrust
- late enough to permit reaching a minimal 105-nautical mile
- orbit with orbital maneuvering system engines.
-
- - Abort-Once-Around (AOA) -- Earlier main engine shutdown
- with the capability to allow one orbit around the Earth before
- landing at either Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., White Sands
- Space Harbor, N.M., or the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) at
- the Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
-
- - Trans-Atlantic Abort Landing (TAL) -- Loss of one or more
- main engines midway through powered flight would force a
- landing at either Banjul, The Gambia; Ben Guerir, Morocco; or
- Rota, Spain.
-
- - Return-To-Launch-Site (RTLS) -- Early shutdown of one or
- more engines, without enough energy to reach Banjul, would
- result in a pitch around and thrust back toward KSC until
- within gliding distance of the Shuttle Landing Facility.
-
- STS-50 contingency landing sites are Edwards Air Force
- Base, the Kennedy Space Center, White Sands Space Harbor,
- Banjul, Ben Guerir and Rota.
-
-
-
- THE U.S. Microgravity Laboratory-1 MISSION
-
-
- The U. S. Microgravity Laboratory (USML) -1 and
- subsequent missions will bring together representatives from
- academia, industry and the government to study basic scientific
- questions and gain new knowledge in materials science,
- biotechnology, combustion science, the physics of fluids and
- the way energy and mass are transported within them. The U.S.
- Microgravity Laboratory series will help the United States
- maintain world leadership in microgravity research and
- development.
-
- As Space Station Freedom development proceeds, the USML
- missions will continue development and testing of experimental
- flight equipment and will be laying the scientific foundation
- for microgravity research conducted over extended time periods.
- In addition, USML experiments will be conducted on nutrient and
- water transport for growing food in space, on the behavior of
- fire in low-gravity and on the effects of long-term space
- travel on humans.
-
- In June 1992, the USML-1 Spacelab mission -- designated
- STS-50 -- will be launched into a 160-nautical-mile orbit
- aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia. It will be a 13-day mission
- to perform scientific investigations using some of the latest
- high-technology research equipment. Because of the great
- number of experiments planned for the mission and to fully
- utilize the time in microgravity, the crew will be split into
- two teams. Each team will work a 12-hour shift to maintain
- around-the-clock operations.
-
-
- The Laboratory
-
- Spacelab is a modular research laboratory flown within
- the Shuttle orbiter's cargo bay. It includes interchangeable
- elements, including open U-shaped platforms, called pallets
- (for equipment such as telescopes that require direct exposure
- to space), and short and long laboratory modules. The
- laboratory modules are pressurized so researchers can work in a
- laboratory environment in their shirt sleeves rather than bulky
- spacesuits. These elements are arranged in the Shuttle cargo
- bay to meet the unique needs of each mission.
-
- For USML-1, the long pressurized module will be used.
- This 23-foot-long laboratory workshop will contain a series of
- standard racks that will hold furnaces for growing crystals,
- facilities for studying the behavior of fluids and doing
- combustion research, computers and other equipment needed for
- the various experiments.
-
- During USML-1, as with all NASA Spacelab missions, flight
- controllers and experiment scientists direct science activities
- from the Spacelab Mission Operations Control Center in
- Huntsville, Ala. They have a direct voice communication link
- with the orbiting Spacelab crew, and on-board video cameras
- make it possible for them to view crew and experiment
- activities. Scientists and controllers on the ground can
- receive information from Spacelab experiments and send commands
- via computer links. With this communications access,
- scientists on the ground and in orbit can work together,
- sharing information about experiments, monitoring data, solving
- problems and revising experiment plans.
-
-
- Extended Mission
-
- Shuttle missions usually have been less than 10 days. At
- 13 days, USML-1 will be the longest Shuttle mission to date.
- This will be made possible by the first use of the new Extended
- Duration Orbiter kit, which includes equipment and fuel for
- extra energy production, additional nitrogen tanks for cabin
- air and a regeneration system to remove carbon dioxide. The
- kit eventually may permit Shuttle missions up to 30 days long.
-
-
- What Is Microgravity?
-
- Microgravity literally means a state of very small or
- minute gravity. Earth's gravitational field extends far into
- space. It is the Shuttle's balance between that gravity, which
- pulls it down, and centrifugal force, created as the Shuttle
- flies along a circular path, that causes space travelers and
- anything in the Shuttle that is not secured to "float" in
- space as they fall free in Earth's gravitational field. Though
- microgravity is a relatively new term, it could become a
- household word in the next century as the potential benefits of
- space-based research are realized.
-
-
- USML-1 Experiments
-
- Equipment used and data obtained during earlier Shuttle
- missions provide a basis on which many of the USML-1
- investigations will build. During the USML-1 mission, 31
- experiments will be conducted in four broad areas -- materials
- science, fluid physics, combustion science and biotechnology --
- in addition to the study of accelerations in the Shuttle and
- the complementary glovebox experiments.
-
- Laboratory hardware includes new equipment, such as the
- Crystal Growth Furnace, and some equipment that has flown
- previously, such as the Solid Surface Combustion Experiment.
-
-
- (First USML GRAPHIC)
-
-
- (STS-50 CARGO CONFIGURATION GRAPHIC)
-
-
- MATERIALS SCIENCE
-
- While in space, materials can be formed in ways not
- possible on Earth. Research performed in the microgravity
- environment of Spacelab has greatly reduced gravitational
- effects, such as settling and separation of components and
- convection.
-
- The Crystal Growth Furnace is new equipment developed
- specifically to study directional solidification of materials
- (primarily semi-conductors), which form the basis of electronic
- devices. Over the past few decades, semiconductor technology
- has revolutionized our lifestyle through consumer goods such as
- smaller, faster computers, more precise timepieces and a wide
- variety of audio/video and other communication equipment that
- just a few years ago were found only in science fiction.
-
- The Crystal Growth Furnace is one of the first U.S.
- furnaces developed for spaceflight that processes samples at
- temperatures above 2,300 degrees Fahrenheit (approximately
- 1,300 degrees Centigrade). This reusable equipment will help
- scientists investigate the different factors affecting crystal
- growth and explore the best methods to produce better crystals.
-
- Four experiments to be conducted in the Crystal Growth
- Furnace will result in crystals grown from different materials:
- cadmium telluride, mercury zinc telluride, gallium arsenide and
- mercury cadmium telluride. These crystals are used in infrared
- detectors found in certain medical equipment, night-vision
- goggles and sensors used in some telescopes.
-
- In the orbiter crew cabin mid-deck area, zeolite crystals
- will be grown. Zeolite crystals act as sponges or filters.
- They are called molecular sieves because they strain out
- specific molecules from a compound. High-quality zeolites may
- one day allow gasoline, oil and other petroleum products to be
- refined less expensively.
-
- Protein crystal growth experiments -- also conducted in
- the mid-deck -- will study the growth of crystals in a low-
- gravity environment. Proteins are large, complex compounds
- made of a very specific arrangement of amino acids present in
- all life forms. Like the minerals named above, proteins also
- can have a crystalline structure.
-
- The function of a certain type of protein is determined
- by its molecular arrangement. By understanding how a protein
- is structured, scientists may be better able to develop foods
- that have improved nutritional value. Also, medicines that act
- in a specific way with fewer side effects or new medicines to
- treat diseases may be designed.
-
-
- Crystal Growth Furnace Experiments
-
- On USML-1, four principal investigators (PIs) will use
- the Crystal Growth Furnace (CGF) to study the effect of gravity
- on the growth of a variety of materials having electronic and
- electro-optical properties. Gravity contributes to the
- formation of defects during the production of crystals of these
- materials through convection, sedimentation and buoyancy
- effects. These gravity-induced complications result in
- problems ranging from structural imperfections to chemical
- inhomogeneity. By conducting crystal growth research in
- microgravity, scientists can investigate the different factors
- affecting crystal growth and determine the best methods to
- produce various types of crystals.
-
-
- (CGF INTEGRATED FURNACE EXPERIMENT ASSEMBLY GRAPHIC)
-
-
- The CGF is the first space furnace capable of processing
- multiple large samples at temperatures up to 1800!F (1350!C).
- The CGF consists of three major subsystems: the Integrated
- Furnace Experiment Assembly (IFEA), the Avionics Subsystem and
- the Environmental Control System (ECS). The IFEA houses a
- Reconfigurable Furnace Module (RFM) -- a modified Bridgman-
- Stockbarger furnace with five controlled heating zones -- a
- Sample Exchange Mechanism capable of holding and positioning up
- to six samples for processing and a Furnace Translation System
- which moves the furnace over each sample. Sample material is
- contained in quartz ampoules mounted in containment cartridges.
- Thermocouples mounted in each cartridge provide temperature
- data. The Avionics Subsystem monitors and controls the CGF
- experiments and provides the interface with the Spacelab data
- system. The ECS maintains and controls the argon processing
- atmosphere inside the IFEA and provides cooling to the outer
- shell of the furnace through connections to Spacelab Mission
- Peculiar Equipment (MPE) fluid loop.
-
- Once on orbit, a crew member will open the IFEA and load
- six experiment samples into the Sample Exchange Mechanism. The
- samples are processed under computer control. PIs can change
- experiment parameters via command uplinking. A flexible
- glovebox is used to provide crew access to the interior of the
- IFEA should an ampoule/cartridge fail on orbit.
-
-
- Orbital Processing of High-Quality CdTe Compound Semiconductors
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. David J. Larson, Jr.
- Grumman Corporation Research Center
-
- Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CdZnTe) crystals are used as
- lattice-matched substrates in a variety of mercury cadmium
- telluride (HgCdTe) infrared detectors. Reducing defects in the
- CdZnTe substrate minimizes the propagation of defects into the
- active HgCdTe layer during its growth. The purpose of the
- experiment is to quantitatively evaluate the influences of
- gravitationally-dependent phenomena (convection and hydrostatic
- pressure) on the chemical homogeneity and defect density of
- CdZnTe.
-
- Processing the CdZnTe crystals in microgravity could
- significantly improve the chemical homogeneity of the
- substrates, minimizing interface strain and reducing the
- defects that result from gravitationally dependent phenomena.
- This improvement in substrate quality should enhance the
- quality and performance of the HgCdTe active detector. An
- improved understanding of gravitationally-dependent
- thermosolutal convection on the structural and chemical quality
- of alloyed compound semiconductors may help improve modeling of
- the semiconductor growth process which, in turn, would result
- in improving the chemical homogeneity and defect densities of
- the material, as well as increasing the primary yield of high
- quality material for infrared applications.
-
- The sample on USML-1 (Cd0.96Zn0.04Te) will be processed
- using the seeded Bridgman-Stockbarger method of crystal growth.
- Bridgman-Stockbarger crystal growth is accomplished by
- establishing isothermal hot-zone and cold-zone temperatures
- with a uniform temperature gradient between. The thermal
- gradient spans the melting point of the material (1,095!C).
- After sample insertion, the furnace's hot and cold zones are
- ramped to temperature (1,175!C and 980!C respectively)
- establishing a thermal gradient of 25!C/cm and melting the bulk
- of the sample. The furnace is then programmed to move farther
- back on the sample, causing the bulk melt to come into contact
- with the high-quality seed crystal, thus "seeding" the melt.
- The seed crystal prescribes the growth orientation of the
- crystal grown. Having seeded the melt, the furnace translation
- is reversed and the sample is directionally solidified at a
- uniform velocity of 1.6 mm/h by moving the furnace and the
- thermal gradient over the stationary sample.
-
- The USML-1 sample will be examined post-flight using
- infrared and optical microscopy, microchemical analysis, X-ray
- precision lattice parameter mapping and synchrotron topography,
- infrared transmission, optical reflectance, photoconductance
- and photoluminescence spectroscopy. These characterization
- techniques will quantitatively map the chemical, physical,
- mechanical and electrical properties of the CGF flight crystal
- for comparison with identically processed CGF ground samples.
- These results will be compared quantitatively with the best
- results accomplished terrestrially using the same growth
- method. Thermal, compositional and stress models will be
- quantitatively compared to the experimental 1-g and
- microgravity results.
-
-
- Crystal Growth of Selected II-VI Semiconducting Alloys by
- Directional Solidification
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Sandor L. Lehoczky
- NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
- Huntsville, Ala.
-
- The purpose of the experiment is to determine how the
- structural, electrical and optical properties of selected II-VI
- semiconducting crystals are affected by growth in a low-gravity
- environment. On USML-1, the PI will investigate mercury zinc
- telluride (HgZnTe), with particular emphasis on compositions
- appropriate for infrared radiation detection and imaging in the
- 8- to 12-micrometer wavelength region. Infrared detection and
- imaging systems at those wavelengths have the potential for use
- in applications ranging from resource detection and management
- on Earth to deep-space imaging systems. On Earth, gravity-
- induced fluid flows and compositional segregation make it
- nearly impossible to produce homogeneous, high-quality bulk
- crystals of the alloy.
-
- The PI will attempt to evaluate the effect of
- gravitationally driven fluid flows on crystal composition and
- microstructure and determine the potential role of irregular
- fluid flows and hydrostatic pressure effects in causing crystal
- defects. The flight experiment should produce a sufficient
- quantity of crystal to allow the PI to perform bulk property
- characterizations and fabricate detectors to establish ultimate
- material performance limits.
-
- The sample on USML-1 (Hg0.84Zn0.16Te) will be processed
- using the directional solidification crystal growth method.
- The hot zone of the CGF furnace will be 800!C for melting, and
- the cold zone will be 350!C. A portion of the sample will be
- melted in the hot zone, and crystal growth will occur in the
- resulting temperature gradient. The furnace and thus, the
- temperature gradient, will be moved slowly across the sample at
- a rate of approximately 3.5 mm per 24 hrs. The slow rate is
- required to prevent constitutional supercooling ahead of the
- solidification interface.
-
- The sample produced on USML-1 will be examined after the
- mission for chemical homogeneity and microstructural perfection
- by using a wide array of characterization techniques, including
- optical and electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray
- topography and X-ray energy dispersion, infrared transmission
- spectroscopy and galvanomagnetic measurements as a function of
- temperature and magnetic field. Selected slices from the
- crystal will be used to fabricate device structures (detectors)
- for further evaluation.
-
-
- Study of Dopant Segregation Behavior During Growth of GaAs in
- Microgravity
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. David H. Matthiesen
- GTE Laboratories Incorporated
-
- Typically, semiconductors have a very small amount of
- impurity added to them to precisely engineer their material
- properties. These impurities, called dopants, are usually
- added at a level of 10 parts per million. Because of
- convection in the melt on Earth, it is very difficult to
- precisely control dopant distribution. Inhomogeneity in dopant
- distribution leads to widely varying material properties
- throughout the crystal. This experiment investigates
- techniques for obtaining complete axial and radial dopant
- uniformity during crystal growth of selenium-doped gallium
- arsenide (GaAs). GaAs is a technologically important
- semiconductor used in a variety of applications, such as high-
- speed digital integrated circuits, optoelectronic integrated
- circuits and solid-state lasers.
-
- This experiment will use GaAs doped with selenium to
- investigate the potential of the microgravity environment to
- achieve uniform dispersal of the dopant during crystal growth.
- The hot zone (1,260!C) and the cold zone (1,230!C) temperatures
- are chosen to locate the 1,238!C melting point of GaAs in the
- center of the gradient zone.
-
- The PI will analyze the USML-1 sample post-flight using a
- variety of techniques, including electrical measurements by
- Hall effect and capacitance-voltage techniques, chemical
- measurements by glow discharge mass spectroscopy and optical
- measurements by advanced quantitative infrared microscopy and
- Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. These data will be
- compared to current analytical and computer model based
- theories.
-
-
- Vapor Transport Crystal Growth of HgCdTe in Microgravity
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Heribert Wiedemeier
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, N.Y.
-
- This experiment will investigate the relationship between
- convective flow, mass flux and morphology in mercury cadmium
- telluride (HgCdTe) crystals. HgCdTe crystals are useful as
- infrared detectors for a variety of defense, space medical and
- industrial applications. Crystals free of large structural
- defects and with a more even dispersion of the constituent
- elements may improve detector performance. To better
- understand the factors that influence HgCdTe crystal growth,
- this experiment will examine phenomena ranging from temperature
- profiles to how the aspect ratio (shape) of the sample ampoule
- affects mass transport and crystal growth.
-
- The USML-1 sample (Hg0.8Cd0.2Te) will be processed using
- the vapor transport crystal growth technique. The sample
- material, sealed in one end of a quartz ampoule will be heated
- to 625!C. The vapors driven off will deposit as a crystal in
- the cold zone (455!C).
-
- After the mission, the flight crystal will be examined
- using X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy, scanning electron
- microscope/wavelength dispersive spectroscopy, chemical
- etching, Hall measurement and other techniques for evaluation
- of morphology, structural perfection and properties of the
- crystals. The flight crystal may be used to fabricate an
- infrared detector for further examination of its device
- performance. The PI will evaluate the temperature profile and
- the geometry of the condensation region of the flight sample to
- determine how these factors affect mass fluxes and crystal
- morphology. In addition, the PI will study how the aspect
- ratio of the ampoule affects mass transport and crystal growth
- properties.
-
-
- ZEOLITE CRYSTAL GROWTH
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Albert Sacco
- Worcester Polytechnic Institute
-
- NASA's Office of Commercial Programs (OCP) is sponsoring
- the Zeolite Crystal Growth payload, developed by the Battelle
- Advanced Materials Center, a NASA Center for the Commercial
- Development of Space (CCDS) based in Columbus, Ohio, and the
- Clarkson Center for Commercial Crystal Growth in Space, a CCDS
- based in Potsdam, N.Y.
-
- The ZCG payload is designed to process multiple samples
- of zeolite crystals, providing scientists with data on the most
- efficient procedures and equipment for producing high-quality
- zeolite crystals in space.
-
- Zeolite crystals are complex arrangements of silica and
- alumina which occur both naturally and synthetically. An open,
- three-dimensional, crystalline structure enables the crystals
- to selectively absorb elements or compounds. As a result, the
- crystals are often used as molecular sieves, making the
- crystals highly useful as catalysts, filters, absorbents and
- ion exchange materials.
-
- Zeolite crystals produced in space are expected to be
- larger and more perfect than their ground-produced
- counterparts, providing tremendous industrial potential for
- space-produced crystals. Ground-produced crystals are small in
- size, causing severe disadvantages in absorption/separation and
- ion exchange processes. Knowledge gained through space-based
- processing of large zeolites will provide a better
- understanding of how zeolites act as catalysts, which could
- result in the development of new ground-based catalysts.
-
- Current technology produces zeolite crystals using
- chemical additives, however, if large zeolite crystals can be
- produced without the need for additives, then the crystals
- could be used effectively in membrane technology. Such
- membranes could result in major advantages over current
- separation techniques and have potential for numerous
- commercial applications. In an attempt to grow such crystals
- and to investigate optimal growth conditions, the ZCG
- experiments on this mission will be processed in the middeck
- and the Glovebox Module, an enclosed compartment that minimizes
- risks to the experiments and the Spacelab environment.
-
- The ZCG experiment will be contained in a cylindrical ZCG
- furnace assembly which fits into the space of two middeck
- lockers and uses another locker for storage. The furnace
- consists of 19 heater tubes surrounded by insulation and an
- outer shell. Multiple samples will be processed in the furnace
- using three independently-controlled temperature zones of 175
- degrees C, 105 degrees C and 95 degrees C.
-
- The nucleus of the experiment will consist of 38
- individually-controlled, metal autoclaves, each containing two
- chambers and a screw assembly. To activate the experiment, a
- crew member will turn the screw assembly with a powered
- screwdriver, pressurizing the solution in one chamber and
- forcing it into the other. Turning the screw assembly in the
- opposite direction will pull the fluid back into the emptied
- chamber. By repeating this process several times, proper
- mixing of the two solutions can be obtained (several different
- mixing aids and nozzle designs are to be used on this mission).
-
- Other experiments conducted in the Glovebox Module will
- use clear autoclaves to determine the proper number of times
- the fluids should be worked to ensure proper mixing for each
- design. Once all of the autoclaves are activated and loaded
- into the furnace assembly, a cover will be secured over the
- front of the assembly and the furnace activated. Once the
- experiment is complete, the autoclaves will be removed and
- stored for landing. After the mission, scientists will examine
- the crystals to determine which growth conditions were optimum.
-
-
- (ZCG GRAPHIC)
-
-
- FLUID PHYSICS EXPERIMENTS
-
-
- Drop Physics Module (DPM)
-
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- Pasadena, Calif.
-
- The DPM is a major microgravity instrument supporting
- various experiments on the dynamics of fluids freed from the
- influences of gravity and the walls of a container.
-
- Three Earth-based investigators will conduct experiments
- using this system in USML-1: Dr. Robert Apfel, Yale
- University; Dr. Taylor Wang, Vanderbilt University and Dr.
- Michael Weinberg, University of Arizona. Serving as Payload
- Specialist in USML-1 and co-investigator to the three
- university scientists, Dr. Eugene Trinh will be the principal
- operator of the DPM.
-
- The scientists will conduct pure-science studies to
- investigate the internal and surface properties of liquids,
- seeking to verify certain fluid-dynamics theories. To get the
- best match with theory, the scientists need to minimize the
- influence of gravity which distorts the liquid's surfaces and
- separates the material into layers of different density.
-
- Container walls also will distort the surfaces, whether
- the liquid wets them or not, and introduce chemical
- contamination. The DPM uses computer-controlled sound waves in
- a carefully-designed chamber, allowing the investigator to
- position fluid drops free of the chamber walls, moving them,
- spinning them and making them separate and flow together while
- their dynamic properties are observed and recorded on videotape
- and film.
-
- Scientific objectives of the DPM investigations include
- testing and verifying theories describing the behavior of
- vibrating drops stimulated by sound waves, measuring physical
- properties of drop surfaces and studying the shapes of rotating
- drops and their behavior as they split into double drops.
- Other objectives involve understanding the dynamics of
- coalescence, when two free drops merge. Compound drops -- with
- a drop of one type of liquid inside the main drop of another --
- and air-filled liquid shells also will be studied for multiple
- surface-tension effects and for spin dynamics.
-
-
- Science and Technology of Surface-Controlled Phenomena
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Robert E. Apfel
- Yale University
-
- Surface active materials (surfactants) play an important
- role in industrial processes, from the production of cosmetics
- to the dissolution of proteins in synthetic drug production to
- enhanced oil recovery. The PI will use the DPM to conduct two
- sets of experiments to understand the effect of surfactants on
- fluid behavior.
-
- The first experiment will investigate the surface
- properties of single liquid drops in the presence of
- surfactants. Water drops will be positioned stably by the
- acoustic field of the
-
-
- (DPM - GBX GRAPHIC)
-
-
- Drop Physics Module. The drop will be squeezed acoustically
- and then released, exciting it so that it oscillates in a
- quadruple shape. The frequency and damping of the resulting
- free oscillations will be measured. The process will be
- repeated both for varying surfactant concentrations and for
- different surfactants. These results will be analyzed to
- determine the static and dynamic rheological properties of the
- surface of liquid drops (e.g., surface viscosity, elasticity).
- This set of experiments, coupled with the current theoretical
- work of the science team, should give a better understanding of
- the molecular-level forces acting in the surface layer of
- simple water drops.
-
- In the second group of experiments, two water drops
- containing varying concentrations of surfactants first will be
- positioned stably at separate nodes of the Drop Physics Module
- acoustic field. They then will be brought slowly into contact
- by carefully mixing acoustic modes to force the drops toward
- each other. If the drops do not coalesce spontaneously (which
- will be the case as surfactant concentrations increase), a
- combination of static squeezing and then forced oscillation
- will be applied to the contacting drops with increasing
- strength, inducing them to combine. Both the parameters of the
- induction techniques and the interface between the drops will
- be measured during this process in an attempt to characterize
- critical parameters that force the drops to rupture and
- coalesce. The PI will use the dual-drop coalescence experiment
- to gain insight into the role of surfactants as "barriers" to
- coalescence. These experiments also may yield practical
- knowledge by determining an energy-efficient approach to
- enhancing drop coalescence.
-
-
- Drop Dynamics Investigation
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Taylor G. Wang
- Vanderbilt University
-
- Preliminary experiments using acoustic levitation to
- suspend liquid drops were first completed in the Drop Dynamics
- Module flown on the Spacelab-3 mission in 1985. These
- experiments not only confirmed some theories about drop
- behavior but also provided unexpected results. For example,
- the bifurcation point -- when a spinning drop takes a dog-bone
- shape to hold itself together -- came earlier than predicted
- under certain circumstances. On USML-1, the PI team will
- attempt to resolve the differences between experiment and
- theory using the more advanced capabilities of the Drop Physics
- Module. The PI also will use the DPM to study large-amplitude
- oscillations in drop shape and the process of drop fission.
-
- Liquid drops (water, glycerin and silicone oil) between
- 0.5 to 2.7 cm in diameter will be deployed individually or in
- groups in the experiment chamber at ambient temperatures and
- pressures. Sound waves directed at the drops will be varied in
- frequency and intensity as drops are rotated, fused and made to
- oscillate. The equilibrium shapes of both charged and
- uncharged liquids undergoing solid body and differential
- rotation will be experimentally determined. To determine the
- equilibrium shapes of rotating drops, the relative phase
- between the orthogonal acoustic waves used to position each
- drop will be shifted by 90 degrees. This phase shift will
- create an acoustic rotational torque on the drop.
-
- The shape oscillation spectra of drops also will be
- experimentally studied. To determine the shape oscillation
- frequency of both simple and compound drops, the acoustic field
- will undergo carrier modulation to stimulate drop shape
- oscillation. The amplitude of the oscillation as a function of
- the modulation frequency will be studied to determine the non-
- linear behavior of the drop. These data will allow the
- equilibrium shapes and frequency spectrum of both simple and
- compound liquid drops, undergoing different types of rotation
- and oscillation, to be determined.
-
- Finally, the PI will use the DPM to conduct encapsulation
- studies using sodium alginate and calcium chloride to determine
- methods for centering one component of a compound drop. In
- this experiment, sodium alginate droplets will be injected into
- a calcium chloride drop. The resulting compound drop will be
- subjected to various acoustic conditions to try to determine an
- optimal method of forming uniform concentric spherical
- membranes.
-
-
- Measurement of Liquid-Liquid Interfacial Tension and the Role
- of Gravity in Phase Separation Kinetics of Fluid Glassmelts
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Michael C. Weinberg
- University of Arizona
-
- The experiment explores a unique method for measuring an
- important surface parameter -- the tension between interfaces
- of drops and other materials.
-
- There are many liquid solutions that tend to separate
- into several liquid phases when held in an appropriate
- temperature range. This same process occurs in many glass
- systems, where it is referred to as glass-in-glass or liquid-
- liquid phase separation, or amorphous immiscibility. In both
- liquids and glasses, the rates at which these phase separation
- processes occur depend upon several factors, such as the
- temperature and the characteristics of the surface at the
- boundary between phases. The measurement of the liquid-liquid
- interfacial tension will provide one of the key quantities that
- governs the rate of such a process.
-
- The experiment consists of measuring the liquid-liquid
- surface tension of a compound drop consisting of two liquids
- that do not mix. A drop containing tracer particles is
- deployed and then injected with an inner drop. This compound
- drop will be rotated in the Drop Physics Module at specified
- angular velocities, and the shapes of both the inner and outer
- drops will be distorted. After equilibration of drop shape and
- rotation rate, film images will be taken from two orthogonal
- views to record the drops' new geometries. Eight drop sets
- will be examined (four liquid pairs, two drop radii ratios
- each). The photographs will be analyzed to determine the drop
- distortions and will use theoretical models to calculate the
- liquid-liquid surface tension between the substances that make
- up each drop.
-
-
- Astroculture(TM)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Theodore W. Tibbitts
- Wisconsin Center for the Commercial
- Development of Space, Madison
-
- NASA's Office of Commercial Programs is sponsoring the
- Astroculture(TM) payload, developed by the Wisconsin Center for
- Space Automation and Robotics (WCSAR), a NASA Center for the
- Commercial Development of Space (CCDS) based at the University
- of Wisconsin in Madison.
-
- Currently, no satisfactory plant growth unit is available
- for support of long-term plant growth in space. Increases in
- the duration of Space Shuttle missions have made it necessary
- to develop plant growth technology that minimizes the costs of
- life support while in space. Plants can reduce the costs of
- providing food, oxygen and pure water and also lower the costs
- of removing carbon dioxide in human space habitats.
-
- Before plants can be grown in the Astroculture(TM) unit,
- however, a series of experiments will have to be conducted on
- the Space Shuttle to evaluate the critical subsystems (water
- and nutrient delivery, lighting and humidity control) needed to
- construct a reliable plant growth unit. Water and nutrient
- delivery will be tested and evaluated on STS-50, with
- additional experiments added to future missions for evaluation
- of the other two subsystems.
-
- The flight hardware for the STS-50 mission is self-
- contained in a middeck locker and weighs approximately 70
- pounds. The Astroculture(TM) unit consists of a covered cavity
- with two growth chambers containing inert material (having
- particle size of 20 to 40 mesh) that serve as the root matrix;
- a water supply system consisting of a porous stainless steel
- tube embedded into the matrix, a water reservoir, a pump, and
- appropriate valves for controlling the pressure flow of water
- through the stainless steel tube; a water recovery system
- consisting of the same components as the water supply system;
- and a microprocessor system for control and data acquisition
- functions.
-
- In orbit, the water supply and recovery systems will be
- activated to initiate circulation of a nutrient solution
- through the porous tubes. Subsequently, the solution will move
- through the wall of each porous tube into the matrix by
- capillary forces. In the matrix, the small pores will be
- filled with the solution and the large pores with air, thereby
- providing a non-saturated state. The recovery system will
- operate at several pressure levels to determine the rate at
- which the solution will move through the matrix and the
- capacity of the supply system to provide the solution to the
- matrix.
-
- A computer system will monitor the amount of solution
- pumped from the supply reservoir to the recovery reservoir.
- Data collected by the computer will indicate the supply
- system's overall capacity for replacing water and nutrients
- removed by plants growing in microgravity.
-
-
- (ASTROCULTURE GRAPHIC # 1)
-
-
- (ASTROCULTURE GRAPHIC # 2)
-
-
- (STDCE Graphic)
-
-
- SURFACE TENSION DRIVEN CONVECTION EXPERIMENT (STDCE)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Simon Ostrach
- Case Western Reserve University, Ohio
-
- On Earth, buoyancy-driven flows and convection impede
- attempts to grow better crystals and solidify new metals and
- alloys. Ground-based and preliminary space experiments have
- shown that variations in surface tension, caused by temperature
- differences along a liquid's free surface, generate
- thermocapillary fluid flows. Although thermocapillary flows
- exist on Earth, they are masked by stronger buoyancy-driven
- flows. In low-gravity, buoyancy-driven flows are reduced,
- making it easier to examine thermocapillary flows. Earth's
- gravity also alters the liquid free surface shape and damping
- characteristics of any fluid. The microgravity environment
- allows researchers to study the impact of a variety of curved
- free surface geometries on thermocapillary fluid flows.
-
- The USML-1 Surface Tension Driven Convection Experiment
- (STDCE) will obtain quantitative data on thermocapillary flows
- over a wide range of parameters in experiments that vary the
- imposed surface temperature distributions (thermal signatures)
- and the configuration of the liquid's free surface. For USML-
- 1, both steady flows (those that do not change over time) and
- transient flows (those that do change over time) will be
- studied. A variety of conditions and experiment configurations
- will be used, and an attempt will be made to identify the
- conditions for the onset of oscillations.
- The experiments will be conducted in the Surface Tension
- Driven Convection Experiment Apparatus, which consists of an
- experiment package and an electronics package located in a
- double Spacelab rack. The experiments are carried out in a
- cylindrical container (10 cm in diameter and 5 cm high). A
- lightweight silicone oil is used as the test fluid because it
- is not susceptible to surface contamination, which can ruin
- surface tension experiments. The experiment package contains
- the test chamber, made of copper to assure good thermal
- conductivity along the walls, and the silicone oil system,
- consisting of a storage reservoir and a fluid management system
- for filling and emptying the test chamber.
- Two heating systems, which provide the different thermal
- signatures, are part of the test chamber. A submerged
- cartridge heater system will be used to study thermocapillary
- flows over a range of imposed temperature differences. A
- surface heating system will be used to investigate fluid flows
- generated by various heat fluxes distributed across the surface
- of the liquid. This heating system consists of a CO\s\do2(2)
- laser and optical elements that direct the laser beam to the
- test chamber and vary the imposed heat flux and its
- distribution.
- To visualize the fluid flows in the test chamber, a laser
- diode and associated optical elements will illuminate aluminum
- oxide particles suspended in the silicone oil, and a video
- camera, attached to a chamber view port, will record the
- particle motion. A scanning infrared imaging system records
- oil surface temperature. Thermistors inside the test chamber
- measure bulk oil temperatures. The crew can use a Spacelab
- camera mounted to the front of the chamber to monitor oil
- filling and draining, submerged heater positions and oil
- surface shapes and motions. These data will be downlinked to
- the Spacelab Payload Operations Control Center at the Marshall
- Space Flight Center. Based on the analysis of the data, a new
- set of test parameters for the next series of experiments will
- be uplinked to the experiment computer in the Spacelab. From
- the data obtained, the PI will correlate velocity and
- temperature distributions with imposed thermal conditions to
- complete mathematical models of thermocapillary flow.
-
-
-
- COMBUSTION SCIENCE EXPERIMENT
-
- SOLID SURFACE COMBUSTION EXPERIMENT (SSCE)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Robert A. Altenkirch
- Mississippi State University
-
- The Solid Surface Combustion Experiment (SSCE) is a major
- study of how flames spread in microgravity. Comparing data on
- how flames spread in microgravity with knowledge of how flames
- spread on Earth may contribute to improvements in all types of
- fire safety and control equipment. This will be the fifth time
- SSCE has flown aboard the Shuttle. Ultimately, plans call for
- SSCE to fly a total of eight times, testing the combustion of
- different materials under different atmospheric conditions.
-
- In the SSCE planned for USML-1, scientists will test how
- flames spread along a sample of Plexiglas in an artificial
- atmosphere containing oxygen mixed with nitrogen.
-
- During the other four missions on which this experiment
- was flown, samples of a special filter paper were burned in
- atmospheres with different levels of oxygen and pressure. The
- special filter paper and Plexiglas were chosen as test
- materials because extensive databases already exist on the
- combustion of these materials in Earth's gravity. Thus,
- combustion processed on Earth and in space can be readily
- compared.
-
- Scientists will use computer image enhancement techniques
- to analyze the film record of the Solid Surface Combustion
- Experiment. They then will compare the enhanced images and
- recorded temperature and pressure data with a computer
- simulation of the flame spreading process. Reconciling the two
- sets of data is expected to provide new insights into the basic
- process of combustion.
-
-
- BIOTECHNOLOGY EXPERIMENTS
-
-
- PROTEIN CRYSTAL GROWTH (PCG)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Charles E. Bugg
- University of Alabama at Birmingham
-
- NASA's Office of Commercial Programs (OCP) is sponsoring
- the Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) payload, developed by the
- Center for Macromolecular Crystallography (CMC), a NASA Center
- for the Commercial Development of Space (CCDS) based at the
- University of Alabama at Birmingham.
-
- The objective of the PCG experiments is to produce large,
- well-ordered crystals of various proteins. These crystals will
- be used in ground-based studies to determine the three-
- dimensional structures of the proteins and to investigate the
- kinetics of crystal growth and the impact of fluid disturbances
- on crystal growth.
-
- Since proteins play an important role in everyday life --
- from providing nourishment to fighting disease -- research in
- this area is quickly becoming a viable commercial industry.
- Scientists need large, well-ordered crystals to study the
- structure of a protein and to learn how a protein's structure
- determines its functions.
-
- The technique most-widely used to determine a protein's
- three-dimensional structure is X-ray crystallography, which
- requires large, well-ordered crystals for analysis. Crystals
- produced on Earth often are large enough to study, but usually
- they have numerous gravity-induced flaws. However, space-
- produced crystals tend to be purer and have more highly-ordered
- structures which significantly facilitates X-ray diffraction
- studies of the crystallized proteins.
-
- Studies of such crystals not only can provide information
- on basic biological processes, but they could lead to the
- development of food with higher protein content, highly
- resistant crops and more effective drugs. By studying the
- growth rates of crystals under different conditions, scientists
- can find ways to improve crystal growth in microgravity, thus
- providing higher-quality crystals for study and the ability to
- produce large crystals made of hard-to-grow proteins. For
- these reasons, PCG activities have been conducted on 14 Shuttle
- missions counting STS-49.
-
- On STS-50, the flight hardware will include two
- Refrigerator/Incubator Module (R/IM) thermal enclosures and one
- newly-designed thermal enclosure, called the Commercial R/IM
- (CRIM). The CRIM allows for a pre-programmed temperature
- profile and a feedback loop that monitors CRIM temperatures
- during flight.
-
- To optimize protein crystal growth conditions, some of
- the PCG experiments will be conducted in the Glovebox Module,
- an enclosed compartment that minimizes risk to the experiments
- and the Spacelab environment. Prior to being activated, the
- experiments will be stowed in a R/IM set at 22 degrees C. The
- experiments will be conducted using modular crystal growth
- hardware and will include as many as 21 different proteins.
- Experiment parameters will be altered in response to crew
- observation of the crystal growth process. New experiments
- will be initiated throughout the mission to take advantage of
- lessons learned from early experiment runs. As the PCG
- activities in the Glovebox are completed, the experiments will
- be returned to the 22-degree R/IM.
-
- Other PCG experiments will be stowed in the other R/IM,
- also set at 22 degrees C, and the CRIM, set at 4 degrees C.
- Each will contain three vapor diffusion apparatus (VDA) trays
- with 20 individual growth chambers. One side of each tray
- holds 20 double-barreled syringes, while the other side holds
- plugs that cap the tips of the syringes. Protein solution will
- be stored in one barrel of each syringe, and the other will
- house precipitant solution. A reservoir of concentrated
- precipitant solution surrounds each syringe inside the crystal
- growth chamber.
-
- To activate the experiment, a crew member will attach a
- handwheel to a ganging mechanism on the plug side of each VDA
- and turn it to retract the plugs from the syringe tips. The
- handwheel then will be moved to the ganging mechanism on the
- syringe side of the tray, where it will be turned to extrude
- the protein and precipitant solutions to form a drop on the tip
- of each syringe. The difference in concentration of the
- precipitant in the reservoir and the drop causes water
- molecules to migrate from the drop through the vapor phase into
- the reservoir solution. As the concentration of protein and
- precipitant increase in the drop, crystal growth will begin.
-
- Twenty of the growth chambers are designed to accommodate
- crystal seeding. During the second flight day, a crew member
- will open a port on 10 of the seeding chambers in the VDA R/IM
- and inject each protein drop with a few microliters of solution
- containing Earth-grown "seed" crystals. The operation will be
- repeated on the third flight day with the remaining 10 seeding
- chambers. Inserting seed crystals into the protein droplets is
- expected to initiate immediate growth of protein crystals.
-
- At the end of the mission, the experiments will be
- deactivated. Due to each protein's short lifetime and the
- crystals' resulting instability, the PCG payload will be
- retrieved from the Shuttle within 3 hours of landing and
- returned to the CMC CCDS for post-flight analyses.
-
- Of the 34 proteins selected to fly on this mission, 60
- percent have flown on previous flights. Nine of the proteins
- are OCP-sponsored and have commercial co-investigators that are
- affiliates of the CMC CCDS. Many have potential commercial
- application in the pharmaceutical industry. Structural
- information gained from these experiments may provide better
- understanding of the immune system, the function of individual
- genes and treatment of disease, and many ultimately aid in the
- design of a specific, effective and safe treatment of viral
- infections.
-
- Dr. Lawrence J. DeLucas, Associate Director for PCG at
- the CMC CCDS, is a co-investigator and a payload specialist on
- the STS-50 mission, providing on-site scientific management of
- the PCG experiments.
-
-
- (PCG HARDWARE GRAPHIC)
-
-
- GENERIC BIOPROCESSING APPARATUS
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Michael C. Robinson
- Bioserve Space Technologies
- University of Colorado in Boulder
-
- NASA's Office of Commercial Programs is sponsoring the
- Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus (GBA) payload, developed by
- Bioserve Space Technologies, a NASA Center for the Commercial
- Development of Space (CCDS) based at the University of Colorado
- in Boulder.
-
- The GBA is a multi-purpose payload that supports mixing
- of fluids and solids in up to 500 individual sample containment
- devices, called Fluids Processing Apparatuses (FPAs), in
- microgravity. On STS-50, 23 different experiments will be
- conducted in 132 FPAs.
-
- Some of the experiments will be stowed in a middeck
- Refrigerator/Incubator Module (R/IM), while others will be
- stowed in an ambient temperature stowage locker in the Spacelab
- module. Of the 23 experiments, one (called Directed
- Orientation of Polymerizing Collagen Fibers) will be processed
- in the Glovebox Module, an enclosed compartment that allows
- sample manipulation with minimal risks to the experiments and
- the Spacelab environment.
-
- A crew member will activate a batch of 12 FPAs by mixing
- sample materials and inserting them into the GBA for
- incubation. A computer will automatically terminate incubation
- after a preprogrammed duration. A crew member then will remove
- the samples from the GBA, restow them in either the R/IM or
- Spacelab stowage locker and load another batch of samples for
- incubation.
-
- For a number of samples, on-orbit video recordings will
- be obtained to document sample behavior and morphology. The
- GBA will monitor and control its own temperature, and it will
- monitor optical density to provide information on processing
- rates and cell growth.
-
- The GBA will allow scientists to study an array of
- biological processes, with samples ranging from molecules to
- small organisms. Some of the many commercial experiments
- currently scheduled to fly in the GBA include:
-
- Artificial Collagen Synthesis -- the ability to
- artificially synthesize collagen fibers in microgravity could
- result in materials that have the strength and properties of
- natural collagen. Synthesized collagen could be used more
- effectively as artificial skin, blood vessels, and other parts
- of the body.
-
- Assembly of Liposomes and Virus Capsid (two types of
- spherical structures that could be used to encapsulate
- pharmaceuticals) -- the ability to properly assemble liposomes
- and
-
-
- (GBA GRAPHIC)
-
-
- virus capsid in microgravity could result in using them to
- navigate drugs to specific body tissues, such as tumors.
-
- Development of Brine Shrimp and Miniature Wasps in
- Microgravity -- could shed light on the importance of gravity
- in human development and aging and potential components of a
- Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS).
-
- Seed Germination and Development -- could help develop
- technology for growing plants in space and provide knowledge
- for use in agriculture on Earth.
-
- The ability to process such a large quantity of different
- samples truly exemplifies the GBA as a multi-purpose facility,
- helping to answer important questions about the relationship
- between gravity and biology. The GBA will be instrumental in
- evaluating the commercial potential of space-based biomaterials
- processes and products.
-
-
-
- Glovebox
-
-
- The USML-1 Glovebox (GBX), provided by the European Space
- Agency, is a multiuser facility supporting 16 experiments in
- fluid dynamics, combustion science, crystal growth and
- technology demonstration. Some of the experiments will provide
- information that other USML-1 investigations will use
- immediately during the mission to refine their experiment
- operations. Others will provide data that may be used to
- define future microgravity science investigations.
-
- The GBX has an enclosed working space that minimizes the
- contamination risks to both Spacelab and experiment samples.
- The GBX working volume provides two types of containment:
- physical isolation from the Spacelab and negative air pressure
- differential between the enclosure and the Spacelab ambient
- environment. An air-filtering system also protects the crew
- from harmful experiment products. The crew manipulates
- experiment equipment through three doors: a central port
- through which experiments are placed in the working volume and
- two glove doors. When an airtight seal is required, the crew
- inserts their hands into rugged gloves attached to the glove
- doors. If an experiment requires more sensitive handling, the
- crew may don surgical gloves and insert their arms through a
- set of adjustable cuffs.
-
- Most of the GBX experiment modules have magnetic bases
- that hold them to the steel floor of the enclosure. Others
- attach to a laboratory jack that can position the equipment at
- a chosen height above the cabinet floor. Equipment also may be
- bolted to the left wall of the working volume or attached
- outside the GBX with Velcro(TM).
-
- The GBX supports four charge-coupled device (CCD)
- cameras, two of which can be operated simultaneously. Three
- black-and-white and three color camera CCD heads are available.
- Operations can be viewed through three view-ports or through a
- large window at the top of the working volume. The GBX also
- has a backlight panel, a 35-mm camera and a stereomicroscope
- that offers high-magnification viewing of experiment samples.
- Video data can be downlinked in real-time. The GBX also
- provides electrical power for experiment hardware, a time-
- temperature display and cleaning supplies.
-
-
- (DPM - GBX GRAPHIC)
-
-
- Passive Accelerometer System (PAS)
-
- Dr. J. Iwan D. Alexander
- The University of Alabama in Huntsville
-
- The objective of PAS is to test a simple system to
- measure residual acceleration caused by atmospheric drag
- effects and the gravity gradient from the spacecraftUs center
- of mass. Because many microgravity experiments and processes
- are sensitive to accelerations, it is important to measure
- these accelerations to improve the design of future experiments
- and facilities. A proof mass (steel ball) will be placed in a
- glass tube full of water. This tube is contained in a lexan
- sleeve and will be mounted parallel to the flight direction.
- An astronaut tracks its position manually every 1-2 minutes,
- using a ruler and protractor, repositioning the tube if the
- angular deviation of the proof mass exceeds 10!. StokesU law
- will be used to indirectly calculate the residual acceleration
- from the ballUs trajectory and speed. Each run will take
- approximately 20 minutes. This experiment will be repeated 5-
- 10 times during the mission, at several different locations in
- middeck and the Spacelab.
-
-
- Interface Configuration Experiment (ICE)
-
- Dr. Paul Concus
- University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley
- Laboratory
-
- ICE will explore the behavior of liquid-vapor interfaces
- that has been predicted mathematically for certain irregularly
- shaped "exotic" containers in a low-gravity environment. By
- demonstrating the ability to mathematically predict the shape
- and location of liquids in exotic containers, the researchers
- hope to build confidence in the ability to predict fluid
- configurations in containers of all shapes.
-
- ICE has been designed to observe:
-
- The location and relative stability of surface shapes in
- mathematically designed containers
-
- The effects of container surface conditions on fluid
- behavior
-
- The effects of fluid properties on fluid behavior
-
-
- Protein Crystal Growth Glovebox (PCGG)
-
- Dr. Lawrence J. DeLucas
- The University of Alabama at Birmingham
-
- This experiment will be flown by the Center for
- Macromolecular Crystallography, a NASA Center for the
- Commercial Development of Space (CCDS) based at the University
- of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Individual protein crystal
- growth experiments are jointly sponsored by the Office of
- Commercial Programs and the Microgravity Science and
- Applications Division, Office of Space Science and
- Applications.
-
- The objectives are to identify optimal conditions for
- nucleating and growing protein crystals in space and to
- investigate ways of manipulating protein crystals in
- microgravity. By determining the structure of protein
- crystals, scientists may be able to develop dramatically
- improved medical and agricultural products. More information
- is needed about optimum mixing times, solutions concentrations
- and other growth parameters for future microgravity protein
- crystal growth experiments.
-
- The PCGG investigator, Dr. Lawrence J. DeLucas, is a
- USML-1 payload specialist. He and other crew members will
- conduct 720 interactive experiments using modular crystal
- growth hardware and including as many as 21 different proteins.
- Sample materials will be stored in a middeck R/IM for launch.
- Protein crystals will be grown by vapor diffusion and free
- interface diffusion methods. Graduated syringes with
- dispensing devices will be used to extrude precise amounts of
- proteins, buffers or precipitates. Seed crystals will be
- injected into equilibrated protein/precipitant solutions using
- micro-manipulators. The GBX microscope and a PCGG light table
- will be used to inspect growing crystals. Experiment
- parameters will be altered in response to crew observations of
- the crystal growth process. New experiments will be initiated
- throughout the mission to take advantage of lessons learned
- from early experiment runs. Crew members also will study ways
- to manipulate protein crystals and mount them in capillaries.
-
-
- Solid Surface Wetting Experiment (SSW)
-
- Dr. Eugene H. Trinh
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
-
- The objective is to determine the most reliable injector
- tip geometry and coating for droplet deployment for Drop
- Physics Module (DPM) experiments. Fluids experiments in the
- DPM depend on efficient and accurate deployment of droplets of
- the proper volume and shape. Different combinations of fluids
- and injector nozzles will be used to deploy droplets inside the
- GBX working area. A micrometer drive will provide calibrated
- volume control of the manual injection syringe. The crew will
- test three different compositions of water-glycerol mixtures,
- as well as a variety of silicon oils. A coaxial injector will
- be used to inject air bubbles into some drops, so shells can be
- studied. Video data of droplet deployment will be recorded for
- post flight analysis. The crew also will measure droplet
- volume and wetting angles during the tests.
-
-
- Marangoni Convection in Closed Containers (MCCC)
-
- Dr. Robert J. Naumann
- The University of Alabama in Huntsville
-
- The objective is to determine under what conditions (if
- any) surface tension driven convection can occur in closed
- containers. A liquid in space may not conform to the shape of
- its container. It may be possible for Marangoni convection to
- occur along all free surfaces of a liquid. If so, models of
- Marangoni convection effects on heat transfer and fluid motion
- in space must be refined. Two glass ampoules will be tested,
- one with water and one with silicone oil, both containing glass
- tracer beads. Each ampoule has a set of heaters and
- thermistors. The crew will record the onset of Marangoni
- convection during heating with video and the 35mm camera.
- Smoldering Combustion in Microgravity (SCM)
-
- Dr. A. Carlos Fernandez-Pello
- University of California at Berkeley
-
- The SCM experiment will study the smoldering
- characteristics of a polyurethane foam in environments with and
- without air flows. Specifically, the experiment will:
-
- Measure how different air flows and ignitor geometries
- affect the smolder propagation rates and the smolder
- temperatures.
-
- Measure the ignition energy required in low gravity as
- compared to Earth's gravity.
-
- Observe the potential transition from smoldering to
- flaming, the transition from smoldering to extinction and
- conditions leading to the transition.
-
- Data gathered from the experiment will help scientists
- develop computer models of smoldering combustion processes and
- explore ways to control smoldering combustion in low gravity.
- Ultimately, this experiment will improve methods of fire
- prevention, detection and extinguishment aboard spacecraft and
- possibly on Earth.
-
-
- Wire Insulation Flammability Experiment (WIF)
-
- Paul Greenberg
- NASA Lewis Research Center
- Cleveland, Ohio
-
- The WIF experiment is designed to determine the
- offgassing, flammability and flame spread characteristics of
- overheated wire in a low gravity environment.
-
- Extensive studies of the relationship between the
- electrical current passed through a wire and the heating of the
- wire have led to the development of building codes and
- insulation materials that minimize the number and severity of
- wiring-related fires. To support the development of similar
- "building codes" for future space-based structures, the WIF
- will study the warming of electrical wire in microgravity.
-
-
- Candle Flames in Microgravity
-
- Dr. Howard Ross
- NASA Lewis Research Center
- Cleveland, Ohio
-
- This experiment is expected to provide new insights into
- the combustion process.
- Specifically, this experiment is designed to:
-
- Determine if candle flames can be sustained in a purely
- diffusive, very still environment or in the presence of air
- flows smaller than those caused by buoyancy on Earth.
-
- Determine how the absence of buoyant convection affects
- the burning rate, flame shape and color of candle flames.
-
- Study the interactions between two closely spaced candles
- in microgravity.
-
- Determine if candle flames spontaneously oscillate before
- they go out in the absence of buoyancy-induced flows.
-
- For the first test, the crew member will remove a candle
- and ignitor from the candle parts box and install them inside
- the glovebox. After making and verifying the electrical
- connections, the crew member will set up video cameras at the
- top and one side of the glovebox to focus on the area around
- the candle tip and the displays of thermocouple data.
-
- After starting the camera and instruments, the crew
- member will activate the ignitor which will light the candle.
- Photography and temperature measurements will continue until
- the flame burns out or until a fixed period of time passes.
- The crew member then will turn on the glovebox fan to cool the
- candle box and replenish the glovebox with air. After about 1
- minute, the next test can proceed. There will be a total of
- four tests conducted.
-
-
- Fiber Pulling in Microgravity (FPM)
-
- Dr. Robert J. Naumann
- The University of Alabama in Huntsville
-
- The objective is to test a variety of techniques to pull
- fibers in microgravity. On Earth, gravity drainage and
- Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities cause thin columns of low-
- viscosity liquids to break apart or form beads. In space, it
- should be possible to determine which of the two influences is
- the limiting factor in fiber pulling and whether certain low-
- viscosity materials could be more efficiently processed in
- microgravity. Simulated glass melts of different viscosities
- will be extruded from syringes to simulate the drawing of a
- fiber. The time for the breakage of the fibers will be
- determined. There are six syringe sets with decreasing ratios
- of viscosity to surface tension. One video camera will observe
- the apparatus, while the other camera will use a high
- resolution macro lens to focus on the pulled fibers.
-
-
- Nucleation of Crystals from Solutions in a Low-g
- Environment (NCS)
-
- Dr. Roger L. Kroes
- NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
- Huntsville, Ala.
-
- The objective is to test a new technique for initiating
- and controlling the nucleation of crystals from solution in
- reduced gravity. Improvements in the ability to control the
- location and time of the onset of nucleation of crystals in a
- solution have the potential to increase the flexibility of all
- space experiments involving solution crystal growth. A mildly
- supersaturated solution will be injected with a fixed amount of
- warmer solution in a crystal growth test cell. The injected
- solution will be more concentrated than the host solution and
- will initiate nucleation. The nucleation process will be
- recorded on the GBX video system. Solutions of triglycine
- sulfate, L-Arginine phosphate and potassium aluminium sulphate
- will be tested. At the conclusion of each test, any crystals
- produced will be removed and stored for post-flight analysis.
-
-
- Oscillatory Dynamics of Single Bubbles and Agglomeration in an
- Ultrasonic Sound Field in Microgravity (ODBA)
-
- Dr. Philip L. Marston
- Washington State University
-
- The objective is to explore how large and small bubbles
- behave in space in response to an ultrasound stimulus. By
- understanding how the shape and behavior of bubbles in a liquid
- change in response to ultrasound, it may be possible to develop
- techniques that eliminate or counteract the complications that
- small bubbles cause during materials processing on earth. A
- variety of bubble configurations will be tested in a sealed
- water chamber. An ultrasonic transducer will be attached to
- the chamber to establish an ultrasonic standing wave. The wave
- will drive the bubbles into shape oscillations. Bubbles will
- be brought into contact by either the ultrasonic field or
- direct mechanical manipulation. The coalescence and resulting
- decay of large amplitude shape oscillations will be recorded on
- video. The response of bubbles to a surfactant solution --
- sodium dodecyl sulfate -- also will be tested.
-
-
- Stability of a Double Float Zone (DFZ)
-
- Dr. Robert J. Naumann
- The University of Alabama in Huntsville
-
- The objective is to determine if a solid cylinder can be
- supported by two liquid columns and remain stable in
- microgravity. It may be possible to increase the purity and
- efficiency of glass materials with a newly patented technique
- that relies on a solid column of material supported by two
- liquid columns of its own melt. If this arrangement can be
- maintained in microgravity, space may be a suitable laboratory
- for such processing. A variety of double float zone
- configurations will be tested using lexan rods of different
- sizes and with different end geometries. A center rod will be
- supported between two other rods by a float zone made of dyed
- water. The oscillations and breakup of the fluid as the two
- outer rods are moved will be recorded on video.
-
-
- Oscillatory Thermocapillary Flow Experiment (OTFE)
-
- Dr. Simon Ostrach
- Case Western Reserve University
-
- The objective is to determine the conditions for the
- onset of oscillations in thermocapillary flows in silicone
- oils. Temperature variations along a free surface generate
- thermocapillary flows in the bulk liquid. On Earth, the flows
- become oscillatory under certain conditions. By determining
- the conditions present when oscillations begin in microgravity
- and comparing them to oscillatory onset conditions on Earth,
- scientists will gain insight into the cause of the
- oscillations. Four cell/reservoir modules will be tested (two
- different sizes, using two different viscosities of silicone
- oil). Micron-sized aluminium oxide tracer particles will be
- mixed with the fluid in the reservoir. The fluid will then be
- transferred to the test cell. The crew member manipulates the
- cell to obtain a fluid free surface. The fluid then is heated
- by a wire heating element in the center of the test cell.
- Three thermocouples measure the temperature at the wall, heater
- and in the fluid. Three video cameras will record the free
- surface behavior and the thermocouple readings.
-
-
- Particle Dispersion Experiment (PDE)
-
- Dr. John R. Marshall
- NASA Ames Research Center
- Mountain View, Calif.
-
- The PDE will determine the efficiency of air injection as
- a means of dispersing fine particles in a microgravity
- environment. The experiment will serve as a simple trial run
- for particle dispersion experiments in the Space Station Gas-
- Grain Simulation Facility. The dispersion particles also will
- be studied for their tendency to electrostatically aggregate
- into large clusters.
-
- Electrostatic aggregation is an important process for
- cleansing planetary atmospheres after major dust storms,
- volcanic eruptions and meteorite/comet impact. Major
- biological/geological events such as the extinction of the
- dinosaurs have been attributed to the occlusion of sunlight by
- dust in the atmosphere after a meteorite impact. This climate
- effect depends on the time the dust stays aloft, which in turn
- depends upon the rate and mode of dust aggregation; hence the
- importance of understanding the nature of the aggregation
- process.
-
- The PDE consists of a pump unit for generating compressed
- air and eight small experiment modules. An experiment involves
- connecting a module to the pump, pressurizing the pump by
- operation of a hand crank and sudden release of the compressed
- air into the module which forcefully injects a stream of small
- particles into the 2 x 2 x 2 inch cubic experiment volume of
- the module. The injection force disaggregates the particles
- and disperses them throughout the complete module volume. This
- process is filmed on video through one of two windows in the
- module. After this dispersion technique is tested, the
- particles will be monitored as they float freely in the
- experiment chamber and eventually aggregate into large
- clusters. The rapidity of aggregation and the mode of
- aggregation (sphere or chain formation) are of prime interest.
- This process is repeated for all modules. The eight modules
- allow for eight different tests that vary particle size and
- particle mass.
-
-
- Directed Polymerization Apparatus (DPA): Directed Orientation
- of Polymerizing Collagen Fibers
-
- Dr. Louis S. Stodieck
- Center for Bioserve Space Technologies
- Colorado University, Boulder
-
- This experiment is provided by the Center for Bioserve
- Space Technologies, a NASA Center for the Commercial
- Development of Space (CCDS) based at the University of
- Colorado, Boulder. The objective is to demonstrate that the
- orientation of collagen fiber polymers can be directed in
- microgravity in the absence of fluid mixing effects. Collagen
- fibers have potential uses as synthetic implant materials. The
- orientation of collagen fiber polymers is critical to their
- functions, and gravity-driven mixing on Earth interferes with
- the ability to direct the orientation of these fibers.
- Collagen samples will be processed using a Directed
- Polymerization Apparatus. Eight samples will be activated on
- orbit in the GBX. Four will be subjected to weak electric
- currents to direct the orientation of the collagen fibers
- during assembly. Four samples will not be exposed to the
- current and will act as controls. After processing, the
- samples will be stored in a Refrigerator/Incubator Module.
-
-
- Zeolite Glovebox Experiment (ZGE)
-
- Dr. Albert Sacco
- Worcester Polytechnic Institute
-
- The Zeolite Crystal Growth experiment will be provided
- by the Battelle Advanced Materials Center, Columbus, Ohio, and
- the Clarkson Center for Commercial Crystal Growth in Space,
- Potsdam, New York, both of which are NASA Centers for the
- Commercial Development of Space (CCDS). The objective is to
- examine and evaluate mixing procedures and nozzle designs that
- will enhance the middeck Zeolite Crystal Growth experiment.
- Twelve self-contained, cylindrical, Plexiglas/Teflon(TM)
- autoclaves will be used to test three different mixer (nozzle)
- designs and four mixing protocols. Each autoclave is a sealed
- container containing silicate and aluminium solutions in
- separate volumes. The fluids are mixed by using a screwdriver
- to drive a piston into one volume, forcing the fluid through an
- opening to mix with the fluid in the second volume. Operations
- with the twelve autoclaves will be recorded on video.
-
-
- SPACE ACCELERATION MEASUREMENT (SAMS)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Charles Baugher
- NASA Lewis Research Center
- Cleveland, Ohio
-
- The Space Acceleration Measurement System (SAMS) is
- designed to measure and record low-level acceleration that the
- Spacelab experiences during typical on-orbit activities. The
- three SAMS sensor heads are mounted on or near experiments to
- measure the acceleration environment experienced by the
- research package. The signals from these sensors are
- amplified, filtered and converted to digital data before being
- stored on optical disks.
-
- For the first USML-1 mission, the main unit of the Space
- Acceleration Measurement System will be mounted in the center
- aisle of the Spacelab module, near the aft end of the module.
- Its three remote sensor heads will be mounted on the Crystal
- Growth Furnace experiment, Surface Tension Driven Convection
- Experiment and the Glovebox Experiment Module.
-
- SAMS flight hardware was designed and developed in-house
- by the NASA Lewis Research Center.
-
-
-
- EXTENDED DURATION ORBITER MEDICAL PROJECT (EDOMP)
-
- Project Manager:
-
- J. Travis Brown
- NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston
-
- A series of medical investigations are included in the
- STS-50 flight plan to assist in the continuing development of
- countermeasures to combat adverse effects of space flight.
-
- The upward shift of body fluids and slight muscle
- atrophy that occurs in space causes no problems while
- astronauts are in space. Researchers are concerned, however,
- that the readaptative processes occurring immediately upon
- return to Earth's gravity could hinder the crew in an emergency
- escape situation.
-
- The Extended Duration Orbiter Medical Project, sponsored
- by the Johnson Space Center's Medical Science Division, will
- validate countermeasures for longer duration flights. EDOMP
- will have middeck investigations and pre- and post-flight
- investigations to assess the medical status of the crew
- following 13 days of exposure to microgravity. Three
- experiments selected for Spacelab use will involve Lower Body
- Negative Pressure, Variability of Heart Rate and Blood Pressure
- and a Microbial Air Sampler.
-
-
- Lower Body Negative Pressure (LBNP)
-
- During early phases of a mission, observers notice that
- crew members' faces become puffy due to fluid shifting from the
- lower body toward the head and chest in the absence of gravity.
- While it is not a problem on orbit, the fluid shift and
- resultant fluid loss, although appropriate for microgravity,
- can pose potential problems upon return to Earth. Crew members
- may experience reduced blood flow to the brain when standing
- up. This could lead to fainting or dizziness. The
- investigators hypothesize that redistributing body fluids
- through exposure to Lower Body Negative Pressure in conjunction
- with fluid loading and salt tablets will improve this situation
- and help prevent fainting. The benefit is believed to remain
- in the body for 24 hours after the last treatment.
-
- The LBNP experiment uses an inflatable cylinder which
- seals around the waist. The device is tethered to the floor of
- the Spacelab and stands 4 feet tall. A vent to the Spacelab
- vacuum is used to apply negative pressure to the device after
- the crew member is inside. The pressure is gradually
- decreased, drawing fluids to the lower body and somewhat
- offsetting the upward fluid shift that occurs upon entry to
- microgravity. A controller is used to automatically reduce and
- increase the pressure according to a preset protocol.
- Measurements of heart dimensions and function, heart rate and
- blood pressure will be recorded. Leg volume measurements will
- be performed before and after each protocol using the LBNP
- device. The data collected will be analyzed to determine the
- physiological changes in the crew members and the effectiveness
- of the treatment. The result of the procedure is expected to
- be an increased tolerance of orthostasis -- or standing upright
- -- upon return to Earth's gravity.
-
- LBNP has been used a number of times in the U. S. space
- program, first during the Skylab missions. STS-50 will be the
- fourth flight of the current collapsible unit. Researchers are
- refining the LBNP protocol which will be used operationally on
- future 13- through 16-day missions.
-
-
- Variable Heart Rate and Blood Pressure
-
- On Earth, many factors affect our heart rate and blood
- pressure. These include job stress, specific activity and
- diet. There are changes between our sleeping and waking
- states, known as diurnal variation. While emotions and normal
- body cycles cause a majority of these fluctuations, gravity
- plays a role. This study will determine if blood pressure and
- heart rate exhibit more or less variability in microgravity
- than on Earth. The study also will determine whether a change,
- if any, correlates with the reduction in sensitivity of
- baroreceptors in the carotid artery located in the neck.
- Baroreceptors are one of the body's blood pressure sensors used
- to regulate blood pressure and heart rate.
-
- Crew members will wear portable equipment including an
- Automatic Blood Pressure Monitor and a Holter Recorder system
- that continuously records ECG while periodically monitoring
- blood pressure in the arm. The data collected are analyzed
- after the mission.
-
-
- Microbial Air Sample
-
- Although all materials that go into the Shuttle are as
- clean as possible, bacteria and fungi growth have been detected
- in missions of 6-10 days duration. The growths were minimal
- and posed no health risk to the crew.
-
- The microbial air sampler is a small device that will be
- placed in several areas of the Spacelab for air sampling. Agar
- strips will be inserted into the device for collection of
- microbes. Postflight analysis of the agar strips will quantify
- the fungal and bacterial growth from this 13-day mission.
-
-
- Isolated/Stabilized Exercise Platform
-
- One of the major challenges faced in the STS-50/USML
- mission is the incompatibility of astronauts who need to
- perform vigorous exercise to maintain their health while at the
- same time sensitive microgravity experiments which need to be
- in an environment free from disturbances. The solution to this
- problem is a device called the Isolated/Stabilized Exercise
- Platform (ISEM) which supports the use of exercise equipment
- yet cancels out the inherent vibrations.
-
- Lockheed designed the first ISEP for use with an
- ergometer, a stationary-cycle device built by the European
- Space Agency. Future designs will accommodate a treadmill and
- a rowing machine.
-
- The ISEP consists of four rectangular stabilizers
- attached vertically to
- a frame, which rests on shock absorbers called isolators. The
- ergometer attaches to the frame. The stabilizers hold each
- corner of the frame stationary. A motor inside each stabilizer
- uses inertial stabilization to counteract the disturbances
- caused by exercise.
-
- Without stabilizers, a crew member peddling a stationary
- bike can produce as much as 100 pounds of force, which far
- exceeds the allowable microgravity disturbance limits set by
- NASA. With the ISEP system, the exercise is expected to cause
- less than 1 pound of disturbance force on the Shuttle middeck.
-
-
- Investigations into Polymer Membrane Processing
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Dr. Vince McGinness
- Battelle Advanced Materials Center, Columbus, Ohio
-
- The Investigations into Polymer Membrane Processing
- (IPMP), a middeck payload, will make its seventh Space Shuttle
- flight for the Columbus, Ohio-based Battelle Advanced Materials
- Center, a NASA Center for the Commercial Development of Space,
- sponsored in part by the Office of Commercial Programs.
-
- The objective of IPMP is to investigate the physical and
- chemical processes that occur during the formation of polymer
- membranes in microgravity such that the improved knowledge base
- can be applied to commercial membrane processing techniques.
- Supporting the overall program objective, the STS-50 mission
- will provide additional data on the polymer precipitation
- process.
-
- Polymer membranes have been used by industry in
- separation processes for many years. Typical applications
- include enriching the oxygen content of air, desalination of
- water and kidney dialysis.
-
- Polymer membranes frequently are made using a two-step
- process. A sample mixture of polymer and solvents is applied
- to a casting surface. The first step involves the evaporation
- of solvents from the mixture. In the second step, the
- remaining sample is immersed in a fluid (typically water) bath
- to precipitate the membrane, form the solution and complete the
- process.
-
- On STS-50, a crew member will activate the IPMP
- experiment by sliding the stowage tray which contains two IPMP
- units to the edge of the locker. By turning each unit's valve
- to an initial position, the evaporation process is initiated.
- The evaporation process will last 5 minutes for one unit and 1
- hour for the other. Subsequently, the units' valves will be
- turned to a second position, initiating a 15-minute
- precipitation process which includes quenching the membrane
- with water. Once the precipitation process is complete, the
- stowage tray will be slid back into the locker for the flight's
- duration.
-
- Following the flight, the samples will be retrieved and
- returned to Battelle for testing. Portions of the samples will
- be sent to the CCDS's industry partners for quantitative
- evaluation consisting of comparisons of the membranes'
- permeability and selectivity characteristics with those of
- laboratory-produced membranes.
-
-
- ORBITAL ACCELERATION RESEARCH EXPERIMENT (OARE)
-
- Principal Investigator:
-
- Robert C. Blanchard
- NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.
-
- The Orbital Acceleration Research Experiment (OARE)
- provides measurements of orbiter aerodynamic data within the
- thin atmosphere of extreme altitudes. Aerodynamic data is
- acquired on-orbit and during the high-altitude portion of
- atmospheric entry. The OARE instrument comprises a three-axis
- set of extremely sensitive linear accelerometers, which measure
- the vehicle's response to aerodynamic forces. These
- accelerometers are capable of measuring acceleration levels as
- small as one part per billion of Earth's gravity.
-
- Because of their extreme measurement sensitivity, the
- OARE sensors cannot be adequately calibrated on the ground, in
- the presence of Earth's gravity. Consequently, the sensors are
- mounted on a rotary calibration table which enables an accurate
- instrument calibration to be performed on-orbit.
-
- The OARE instrument is installed for flight at the
- bottom of the orbiter's payload bay on a special carrier plate
- attached to the orbiter's keel. OARE data are recorded both on
- the mission payload recorder and within the OARE's own solid-
- state memory for analysis after the flight.
-
-
-
- Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment
-
-
- The Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) is designed
- to demonstrate the feasibility of amateur shortwave radio
- contacts between the Space Shuttle and ground amateur radio
- operators, often called ham radio operators. SAREX also serves
- as an educational opportunity for schools around the world to
- learn about space first hand by speaking directly to astronauts
- aboard the Shuttle via ham radio. Contacts with certain schools
- are included in planning the mission.
-
- Ham operators may communicate with the Shuttle using VHF
- FM voice transmissions, slow scan television and digital
- packet. Several selected ground stations also will be able to
- send standard television to the crew via SAREX. The television
- uplink will be used to send video of the crew's families and of
- the launch.
-
- The primary voice frequencies to be used during STS-50
- are 145.55 MHz for transmissions from the spacecraft to the
- ground and 144.95 MHz for transmissions from the ground to the
- spacecraft. Digital packet and slow scan television will
- operate on the same frequencies, while the television uplink
- will be limited to the UHF ham band at 450 MHz.
-
- Equipment aboard Columbia will include a low-power,
- hand-held FM transceiver, spare batteries, headset, an antenna
- custom designed by NASA to fit in an orbiter window, interface
- module and an equipment cabinet.
-
-
- SAREX has flown previously on Shuttle missions STS-9,
- STS-51F, STS-35, STS-37 and STS-45. SAREX is a joint effort by
- NASA, the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), the Amateur Radio
- Satellite Corp. and the Johnson Space Center Amateur Radio
- Club. Information about orbital elements, contact times,
- frequencies and crew operating times will be available from
- these groups during the mission and from amateur radio clubs at
- other NASA centers.
-
- Ham operators from the JSC club will be operating on HF
- frequencies and the AARL (W1AW) will include SAREX information
- in its regular HF voice and teletype bulletins. The Goddard
- Space Flight Center Amateur Radio Club, Greenbelt, Md., will
- operate 24 hours a day during the mission, providing
- information on SAREX and retransmitting live Shuttle air-to-
- ground communications. In addition, the NASA Public Affairs
- Office at the Johnson Space Center will have a SAREX
- information desk during the mission.
-
-
- STS-45 SAREX Operating Frequencies
-
- Location Shuttle Transmission Shuttle Reception
-
- U.S., Africa 145.55 MHz 144.95 MHz
- South America 145.55 144.97
- and Asia 145.55 144.91
-
- Europe 145.55 MHz 144.95 MHz
- 145.55 144.75
- 145.55 144.70
-
- Goddard Amateur Radio Club Operations
- (SAREX information and Shuttle audio broadcasts)
-
- 3.860 MHz 7.185 MHz
- 14.295 MHz 21.395 MHz
- 28.395 MHz
-
- SAREX information also may be obtained from the Johnson Space
- Center computer bulletin board (JSC BBS), 8 N 1 1200 baud, at
- 713/483-2500 and then type 62511.
-
-
-
- STS-50 PRELAUNCH PROCESSING
-
-
- Columbia arrived at KSC on Feb. 9, after a 6-month
- modification period at Rockwell International in Palmdale,
- Calif. Some of the major changes incorporated into the
- flagship orbiter will allow for extended duration missions up
- to 16 days.
-
- Changes made to equip the orbiter for extended flights
- include adding an extended duration orbiter (EDO) pallet to
- meet additional power and water requirements, increasing the
- capacity of the waste collection system, installing the
- regenerative carbon dioxide removal system for removing carbon
- dioxide from the crew cabin atmosphere, installing two
- additional nitrogen tanks for the crew cabin atmosphere and
- augmenting the stowage space with extra middeck lockers.
-
- Other systems on board Columbia now feature design
- changes or updates as part of continued improvements to the
- Space Shuttle. The upgrades include several improved or
- redesigned avionics systems, the drag chute and new beefed-up
- main gear tires that use a synthetic rubber tread instead of
- the natural rubber previously used.
-
- While in the Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF),
- technicians installed the three main engines. Engine 2019 is
- in the No. 1 position, engine 2031 is in the No. 2 position and
- engine 2011 is in the No. 3 position.
-
- After being readied for its 12th flight, Columbia was
- transferred out of the OPF on May 29th and towed several
- hundred yards to the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and
- connected to its external tank and solid rocket boosters on the
- same day.
-
- In the VAB technicians connected the 100-ton space plane
- to its already stacked solid rocket boosters and external tank.
- Columbia was scheduled to be transferred to pad 39-A the week
- of June 1.
-
- The primary STS-50 payload, the U.S. Microgravity
- Laboratory-1, was installed in the OPF on April 13. An
- interface verification test between the orbiter and laboratory
- was completed.
-
- In addition to the routine operations at the launch pad,
- a test is scheduled in which the orbiter's fuel cell storage
- tanks and extended duration orbiter pallet tanks will be loaded
- with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen reactants. This test
- will validate procedures and establish timelines to tank and
- detank the EDO pallet.
-
- Also planned is the Terminal Countdown Demonstration
- Test with the STS-50 flight crew during the week of June 8.
-
- A standard 43-hour launch countdown is scheduled to
- begin 3 days prior to launch. During the countdown, the
- orbiter's fuel cell storage tanks and extended duration orbiter
- pallet tanks will be loaded with fuel and oxidizer and all
- orbiter systems will be prepared for flight. The hold time
- will be extended to allow extra time for loading the EDO pallet
- with cryogenic propellants.
-
- About 9 hours before launch, the external tank will be
- filled with its flight load of a half million gallons of liquid
- oxygen and liquid hydrogen propellants. About 2 1/2 hours
- before liftoff, the flight crew will begin taking their
- assigned seats in the crew cabin.
-
- Columbia's end-of-mission landing is planned for Edwards
- Air Force Base, Calif. Columbia's landing will feature the
- drag chute. KSC's landing and recovery teams will be on hand
- to prepare the vehicle for the cross-country ferry flight back
- to Florida. Columbia's next flight, STS-52, is planned this
- fall with the LAGEOS II payload.
-
-
-
- STS-50 Crew Biographies
-
-
- Richard N. Richards, 45, Capt., USN, will serve as Commander of
- STS-50. Selected as an astronaut in May 1980, Richards
- considers St. Louis, Mo., his hometown and will be making his
- third space flight.
-
- Richards graduated from Riverview Gardens High School,
- St. Louis, in 1964; received a bachelor's in chemical
- engineering from the University of Missouri in 1969; and
- received a master's in aeronautical systems from the University
- of West Florida in 1970.
-
- Richards first flew as pilot of Shuttle mission STS-28,
- a Department of Defense-dedicated mission in August 1989. His
- next flight was as commander of STS-41, a mission that deployed
- the Ulysses solar probe in October 1990. He has logged more
- than 219 hours in space.
-
-
- Kenneth D. Bowersox, 36, Lt. Cmdr, USN, will serve as pilot.
- Selected as an astronaut in June 1987, Bowersox considers
- Bedford, Ind., to be his hometown and will be making his first
- space flight.
-
- Bowersox graduated from Bedford High School, Bedford,
- Ind.; received a bachelor's in aerospace engineering from the
- Naval Academy in 1978; and received a master's in mechanical
- engineering from Columbia University in 1979.
-
- He was designated a naval aviator in 1981 and was
- assigned aboard the USS Enterprise, where he completed more
- than 300 carrier landings. In 1985, he graduated from the Air
- Force Test Pilot School and was assigned as the A-7E and F/A-18
- test pilot at the Naval Weapon Center when selected by NASA.
- Bowersox has logged more than 2,000 hours flying time.
-
-
- Bonnie J. Dunbar, 43, will serve as mission specialist 1 (MS1)
- and as payload commander. Selected as an astronaut in August
- 1981, she considers Sunnyside, Wash., to be her hometown and
- will be making her third space flight.
-
- Dunbar graduated from Sunnyside High School, Sunnyside,
- Wash.; received a bachelor's and a master's in ceramic
- engineering from the University of Washington; and received a
- doctorate in biomedical engineering from the University of
- Houston.
-
- Dunbar first flew on STS-61A, the Spacelab D-1 mission,
- in November 1985. Her next flight was on STS-32, the mission
- to retrieve the Long Duration Exposure Facility in January
- 1990. She has logged 430 hours in space.
-
-
- Ellen Baker, 39, will serve as mission specialist 2 (MS2).
- Selected as an astronaut in May 1984, Baker considers New York,
- N.Y., to be her hometown and will be making her second space
- flight.
-
- Baker graduated from Bayside High School in New York
- City; received a bachelor's degree in geology from the State
- University of New York; and received a doctorate of medicine
- from Cornell University.
-
- Baker first flew on STS-34, a mission that deployed the
- Galileo probe to Jupiter in October 1989. She joined NASA in
- 1981 and served as a physician in the Flight Medicine Clinic
- until her selection as an astronaut. Baker has logged more
- than 119 hours in space.
-
-
- Carl J. Meade, 41, Col., USAF, will serve as mission specialist
- 3 (MS3). Selected as an astronaut in June 1985, Meade considers
- Universal City, Texas., his hometown and will be making his
- second space flight.
-
- Meade graduated from Randolph High School, Randolph Air
- Force Base, Texas.; received a bachelor's in electronics
- engineering from the University of Texas; and received a
- master's in electronics engineering from the California
- Institute of Technology.
-
- Meade first flew on STS-38 in November 1990, a
- Department of Defense-dedicated Shuttle mission. He has logged
- more than 117 hours in space.
-
-
- Lawrence J. DeLucas, 41, will serve as payload specialist 1
- (PS1). DeLucas was born in Syracuse, N.Y., and will be making
- his first space flight.
-
- DeLucas received a bachelor's and master's in chemistry
- from the University of Alabama at Birmingham; received a
- bachelor's in physiological optics from the University of
- Alabama at Birmingham; and received doctorates of optometry and
- biochemistry from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
-
- He has served as associate director of the Center for
- Macromolecular Crystallography at the University of Alabama
- since 1986; has been a member of the NASA Science Advisory
- Committee for Advanced Protein Crystal Growth since 1987; and
- is a professor in the University of Alabama's Department of
- Optometry. He also is a member of the graduate faculty at the
- University of Alabama.
-
-
- Eugene H. Trinh, 41, will serve as payload specialist 2 (PS2).
- Trinh is a resident of Culver City, Calif., and will be making
- his first space flight. Trinh was born in Saigon, Vietnam, and
- was raised in Paris, France, since age 2. He has lived in the
- United States since 1968.
-
- Trinh graduated from Lycee Michelet, Paris, with a
- baccalaureate degree; received a bachelor's in mechanical
- engineering-applied physics from Columbia University in 1972;
- received a master's in applied physics from Yale University;
- and received a doctorate in applied physics from Yale.
-
- Trinh's research work has focused on physical acoustics,
- fluid dynamics and containerless materials processing. He
- served as an alternate payload specialist for NASA for the
- Spacelab 3 mission in May 1985 and has developed several
- Shuttle flight experiments. He also is a member of the NASA
- Space Station Freedom Experiments planning group for
- Microgravity Science.
-
-
-
- STS-50 MISSION MANAGEMENT
-
- NASA HEADQUARTERS, Washington, D. C.
-
- Office of Space Flight
-
- Jeremiah Pearson Associate Administrator
- Thomas E. Utsman Deputy Associate Administrator
- Bryan O'Connor Deputy Associate Administrator
- (Programs)
- Leonard Nicholson Director, Space Shuttle
-
- Office of Space Science and Applications
-
- Dr. Lennard A. Fisk Associate Administrator
- Alphonso V. Diaz Deputy Associate Administrator
- Robert C. Rhome Director, Microgravity Science
- and Applications Division
- Dr. Roger Crouch USML-1 Program Scientist
- Robert H. Benson Director, Flight Systems
- Division
- James McGuire USML-1 Program Manager
-
- Office of Commercial Programs
-
- John G. Mannix Assistant Administrator
- Richard H. Ott Director, Commercial Development
- Division
- Garland C. Misener Chief, Flight Requirements
- and Accommodations
-
-
- Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif.
-
- Dr. Dale L. Compton Director
- Victor L. Peterson Deputy Director
- Dr. Steven A. Hawley Associate Director
- Dr. Joseph C. Sharp Director, Space Research
-
-
- AMES-DRYDEN FLIGHT RESEARCH FACILITY, EDWARDS, CALIF.
-
- Kenneth J. Szalai Director
- T. G. Ayers Deputy Director
- James R. Phelps Chief, Space Support Office
-
-
- Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
-
- Robert L. Crippen Director
- James A. "Gene" Thomas Deputy Director
- Jay F. Honeycutt Director, Shuttle Management
- and Operations
- Robert B. Sieck Launch Director
- Bascom W. Murrah Columbia Flow Director
- J. Robert Lang Director, Vehicle Engineering
- Al J. Parrish Director of Safety Reliability
- and Quality Assurance
- John T. Conway Director, Payload Management
- and Operations
- P. Thomas Breakfield Director, Shuttle Payload
- Operations
- Joanne H. Morgan Director, Payload Project
- Management
- Russell D. Lunnen STS-50 Payload Processing
- Manager
-
-
- Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
-
- Thomas J. Lee Director
- Dr. J. Wayne Littles Deputy Director
- Harry G. Craft Manager, Payload Projects
- Office
- Charles E. Sprinkle USML Mission Manager
- Dr. Donald O. Frazier USML Mission Scientist
- Alexander A. McCool Manager, Shuttle Projects
- Office
- Dr. George McDonough Director, Science and
- Engineering
- James H Ehl Director, Safety and Mission
- Assurance
- Otto Goetz Manager, Space Shuttle Main
- Engine Project
- Victor Keith Henson Manager, Redesigned Solid
- Rocket Motor Project
- Cary H. Rutland Manager, Solid Rocket Booster
- Project
- Gerald C. Ladner Manager, External Tank Project
-
-
-
- JOHNSON SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON
-
- Paul J. Weitz Director (Acting)
- Paul J. Weitz Deputy Director
- Daniel Germany Manager, Orbiter and GFE
- Projects
- Donald R. Puddy Director, Flight Crew
- Operations
- Eugene F. Kranz Director, Mission Operations
- Henry O. Pohl Director, Engineering
- Charles S. Harlan Director, Safety, Reliability
- and Quality Assurance
-
-
- STENNIS SPACE CENTER, BAY ST. LOUIS, MISS.
-
- Roy Estes Director
- Gerald Smith Deputy Director
- J. Harry Guin Director, Propulsion Test
- Operations
-
-
- SHUTTLE FLIGHTS AS OF MAY 1992 GRAPHIC
-
- STS-50 LAUNCH WINDOW OPPORTUNITIES GRAPHIC
-
- STS-50 PRESS KIT MEDIA SURVEY (BACK COVER)
-
-
- - 30 -
-
-