Andy Thomas puts on the Sokol space suit.
Click on image for full size
Courtesy of NASA
Shuttle-Mir Mission Update
News story originally written on January 27, 1998
The shuttle Endeavour was launched on January 22, 1998. After three travel days, the shuttle docked with the space station
Mir.
During the docking, astronaut Andy Thomas traded places with David Wolf. Right now, the crews are working on bringing hardware, science equipment and water from the Endeavour onto Mir. As of this morning, 60% of the transfer work was done.
Here's a bit of trivia for you - while the two spacecraft are docked, they have a combined weight of more than half a million pounds!
Endeavour and Mir will be docked until around 11 a.m. CST Thursday.
You might also be interested in:
Astronaut David Wolf started spacewalk training in 1991. His training paid off yesterday when he and Mir Commander Solovyev completed a four hour spacewalk outside of space station Mir. The two men used
...moreIt was another exciting and frustrating year for the space science program. It seemed that every step forward led to one backwards. Either way, NASA led the way to a great century of discovery. Unfortunately,
...moreThe Space Shuttle Discovery lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on October 29th at 2:19 p.m. EST. The weather was great as Discovery took 8 1/2 minutes to reach orbit. This was the United States' 123rd
...more A moon was discovered orbiting the asteroid, Eugenia. This is only the second time in history that a satellite has been seen circling an asteroid. A special mirror allowed scientists to find the moon
...more Will Russia ever put the service module for the International Space Station in space? NASA officials want an answer from the Russian government. The necessary service module is currently waiting to be
...moreA coronal mass ejection (CME) happened on the Sun early last month. The material that was thrown out from this explosion passed the ACE spacecraft. The SWICS instrument on ACE has produced a new and very
...moreJ.S. Maini of the Canadian Forest Service called forests the "heart and lungs of the world." This is because forests filter air and water pollution, absorb carbon dioxide, release oxygen, and maintain
...more