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    Avalon Member Timmoth's Avatar
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    Default Shuttle atlantis bringing a new "dawn" for space station

    Not a particularly intersting article, but it's the symbolism that is most interesting to me, which is not apparent if you only read the NASA website on the same subject, however anyone who subscribes to the NASA email list (media releases) will have gotten this headline in their inbox (being mindful of Jordan Maxwell's research aswell as the name change of the US Iraq mission being changed to Operation New Dawn, the 'Anglo-Saxon Mission' involving that region, Hoagland's Magician's, etc...)

    Anyway:


    RELEASE: 10-114

    NASA'S SHUTTLE ATLANTIS BRINGING A NEW "DAWN" FOR SPACE STATION SCIENCE

    WASHINGTON -- NASA's space shuttle Atlantis is delivering science
    experiments and a new Russian laboratory to the International Space
    Station, continuing the transition from station assembly to
    continuous scientific research through the end of the decade.

    The Russian-built Mini Research Module-1, also known as Rassvet (dawn
    in Russian), will host a variety of biotechnology, biological
    science, fluid physics and educational research experiments. Rassvet
    was attached Tuesday morning to the bottom port of the station's
    Zarya module.

    The shuttle crew will conduct nine short-duration experiments during
    the STS-132 mission and return samples from 16 space station
    experiments. They will help enable nearly 130 long-duration station
    experiments in biology, physical and materials sciences, technology
    development, Earth and space science.

    "The Mini Research Module-1 provides important new real estate for
    experiments to be conducted on the space station and will be a
    cornerstone of Russian laboratory facilities for years to come," said
    Julie Robinson, International Space Station program scientist at
    NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. "This new module enhances the
    station's research capabilities and enables new investigations to be
    performed."

    The laboratory contains a pressurized compartment with eight
    workstations equipped with facilities such as a glove box to keep
    experiments separated from the in-cabin environment; two incubators
    to accommodate high- and low-temperature experiments and a vibration
    isolation platform to protect payloads and experiments. It also will
    be used for cargo storage.

    The module contains four other workstations, complete with mechanical
    adapters, to install payloads into roll-out racks and shelves. On its
    exterior, Rassvet will piggy-back an experiment airlock destined for
    use outside the final Russian module, named the Multipurpose
    Laboratory Module, which is planned for launch in 2012.

    The 2005 NASA Authorization Act designated a portion of the station as
    a National Laboratory, accessible to other government agencies,
    commercial entities and academic researchers.

    Among the studies the STS-132 astronauts will conduct is the ninth in
    a series of U.S. National Laboratory Pathfinder experiments aimed at
    developing vaccines to fight disease-causing bacteria. The commercial
    payload will study how several different pathogenic organisms react
    to the microgravity environment. Previous similar experiments led to
    development of a potential vaccine for Salmonella bacteria that cause
    food poisoning. Approval from the Food and Drug Administration is
    being sought for this as an investigational new drug.

    Another commercial National Lab pathfinder, Cells-4, will examine
    cellular replication to determine the use of spaceflight to enhance
    or improve cellular growth processes used in ground-based research.
    The shuttle astronauts also will participate in a first-of-its-kind
    Canadian experiment called Hypersole that aims to determine how the
    sensitivity of the sole of the foot affects balance control.

    The shuttle crew delivered 10 experiments to the space station. These
    include: Genara-A, a European experiment that looks at how plants
    grow without gravity; Ferulate, a Japanese experiment to study the
    strength of cell walls in microgravity; Cube Lab, a low-cost, 1
    kilogram platform for commercial and educational projects; an
    experiment that studies the properties of colloids, which are tiny
    solid particles suspended in liquid, in microgravity; and the Smoke
    and Aerosol Measurement experiment, which is a follow-on
    investigation to previous tests of smoke detection technology.

    Several experiments will return to Earth aboard Atlantis. Among these
    are an European Space Agency experiment that will document the nature
    and distribution of radiation inside the station and create a method
    to measure absorption rates in biological samples; the first samples
    of ceramic glasses produced in Space Dynamically Responding
    Ultrasonic Matrix System, or SpaceDRUMS, which enables samples of
    materials to be processed without ever touching a container wall;
    samples of pharmaceutical quality intravenous fluid produced for the
    first time in space; and the Canadian Space Agency's Advanced Plant
    Experiment-CSA2, which compares the genes and tissue of white spruce
    (Picea glauca) grown in space with those grown on Earth to help
    forestry researchers understand the influence of gravity on plant
    physiology, growth and wood formation.

    For more information about the science performed aboard the
    International Space Station, visit:


    http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/science


    For more information about the STS-132 mission, visit:


    http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle


    -end-
    Last edited by Timmoth; 19th May 2010 at 08:04. Reason: adding detail.

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