STS-217

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STS-217
Mission insignia
STS-217.png
Mission statistics
Mission nameSTS-217
Space shuttleHorizon
Launch padKennedy LC-39D
Launch date25 April, 2017
Landing siteEdwards Runway 22L
Landing9 May, 2017
Orbital period97 min
Orbital altitude600 kilometers (373 miles)
Orbital inclination28.5°
Related missions
Previous mission Next mission
STS-216 STS-216 STS-218 STS-218

STS-217, or HST-SM5 (Hubble Space Telescope Servicing Mission 5), was the sixth space shuttle servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) which was flown by Space Shuttle Horizon. Launch occurred on 25 April, 2017 at 11:03 am EDT. Landing occurred successfully on 9 May, 2017 at 8:38 am PDT.

The mission carried two new instruments to the Hubble Space Telescope, the Advanced Multi-Object Spectrometer and the Advanced Camera for Surveys 2. The mission also replaced the telescope's main computer, a Fine Guidance Sensor, four gyroscopes and two battery unit modules. The crew also installed new thermal insulation panels. In conjunction with STS-214, which raised Hubble's orbit to 374 miles (601.9 km), the mission was intended to allow the telescope to continue operating until at least 2025.

Crew

Position Astronaut
Commander United States Roger Mason
(Raccoon)
Fourth spaceflight
Pilot United States Sarah Engels
(Maned wolf)
Fourth spaceflight
Mission Specialist 1 United States Sandra Harris
(Melanistic black-backed jackal)
Second spaceflight
EV3
Mission Specialist 2 Japan Yuma Tazuka
(Red Panda)
Fourth spaceflight
Mission Specialist 3 Israel Ehud Shalom
(Fennec)
Third spaceflight
Lead spacewalker, EV1
Mission Specialist 4 United States Sonya Alvarez
(Mexican Wolf)
Third spaceflight
EV2
Mission Specialist 5 United States Ricky L. Wilson
(Leopard)
First spaceflight
EV4

Mission history

Following STS-125 and the subsequent retirement of the NASA Space Shuttle fleet, no additional flights to the Hubble Telescope were planned. NASA's original end of mission plan for the telescope was to retrieve it using Space Shuttle Columbia during STS-144, however this plan was cancelled following the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.

The International Space Agency had originally planned to recover the telescope in a mission similar to STS-144, and plans were in work to use a modified Space Shuttle orbiter in order to return the telescope for display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. or at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. Plans were finalized in 2014 for recovery using a modified version of the Flight Support Structure (FSS) designed to hold the telescope inside of the payload bay during repairs. The modified FSS would have been detachable and discarded, along with the solar arrays. Following a petition from scientists and technicians at the Goddard Space Flight Center, the Johnson Space Center and the McGregor Space Center, and due to the increasing complexity of the mission, the numerous modifications required to the Shuttle in order to allow for the mission, and due to safety concerns, ISA managers officially cancelled the Hubble Recovery Mission on August 23, 2014. The crew and Shuttle assigned to the mission were reassigned to STS-217, which was changed to become the fifth servicing flight to the telescope, and the first ISA flight to it in cooperation with NASA.

Mission payload

Location Cargo Mass
Bays 1–2 Orbiter Docking System
EMUs 4008, 4012, 2018, 4022
1,800 kilograms (4,000 lb)
~480 kilograms (1,060 lb)
Bay 3P Shuttle Power
Distribution Unit (SPDU)
~17 kilograms (37 lb)
Bays 4–5 SLIC/COPE with
Advanced Camera for Surveys 2
2,990 kilograms (6,590 lb)
Bays 7–8 ORUC AMOS/RSU/FGS
Advanced Multi-Object Spectrometer
Fine Guidance Sensor, Gyros
3,339 kilograms (7,361 lb)
Bay 10P GABA/MFR ~50 kilograms (110 lb)
Bay 10P GABA/PFR ~50 kilograms (110 lb)
Bay 11 HST-FSS/BAPS
Berthing and Positioning Sys
2,177 kilograms (4,799 lb)
Bay 12 MULE
RNS, NOBL blankets
1,409 kilograms (3,106 lb)
Starboard Sill Orbiter Boom Sensor System ~382 kilograms (842 lb)
Port Sill Canadarm ~410 kilograms (900 lb)
Total: 13,104 kilograms (28,889 lb)

The mission replaced two instruments on Hubble with upgraded replacements. The first instrument, the Advanced Camera for Surveys 2 (ACS2), replaced the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). ACS failed multiple times from 2006-2007 due to electrical system failures. Two of the instrument's channels were returned to service in 2009 following spacewalks performed on STS-125, but the High Resolution Channel (HRC) remained offline. ACS2 was designed as an advanced replacement, utilizing new electrical systems intended to be more reliable than those on ACS and using new sensors and filters to improve the resolution and sensitivity of the telescope. The second instrument, the Advanced Multi-Object Spectrometer (AMOS), replaced the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS). NICMOS failed in 2008 following multiple issues with the onboard cooling systems and was largely replaced by the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). Hubble was never originally designed for near-infrared operations and required onboard cooling systems specifically for NICMOS in order to compensate for the telescope's warm operating environment. The James Webb Space Telescope operates in infrared frequencies at much higher resolution than Hubble, which led designers to abandon IR features for AMOS. The new instrument uses multiple high resolution channels operating from near infrared to ultraviolet frequencies to study objects in unprecedented detail.

The telescope's main hardware was upgraded by replacing a Fine Guidance Sensor which controls the positioning of the telescope, replacing 4 gyroscopes, replacing batteries, replacing the onboard computer system with a one based on the RAD750 and installing new insulation blankets.

Shuttle processing

Mission timeline

25 April (Flight day 1, launch)

26 April (Flight day 2)

27 April (Flight day 3)

28 April (Flight day 4)

29 April (Flight day 5)

30 April (Flight day 6)

1 May (Flight day 7)

2 May (Flight day 8)

3 May (Flight day 9)

4 May (Flight day 10)

Sandra Harris poses for a photo with Hubble behind her on the flight deck shortly before redeployment of the telescope.

5 May (Flight day 11)

6 May (Flight day 12)

7 May (Flight day 13)

8 May (Flight day 14)

9 May (Flight day 15, landing)

Extra-vehicular activity

EVA Spacewalkers Start (UTC) End (UTC) Duration
EVA 1 Ehud Shalom
Sonya Alvarez
29 April 2017
15:52
30 April 2017
00:29
7 hours, 37 minutes
Removed and replaced two of Hubble's gyroscope rate sensing units (RSUs). Removed and replaced the first of two battery unit modules.
EVA 2 Sandra Harris
Ricky L. Wilson
30 April 2017
15:22
30 April 2017
21:57
6 hours, 35 minutes
Replaced Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) with Advanced Camera for Surveys 2 and lubricated three of the shroud doors.
EVA 3 Ehud Shalom
Sonya Alvarez
1 May 2017
15:52
2 May 2017
00:39
8 hours, 47 minutes
Began removal of NICMOS Cooling System (NCS), Electronics Support Module (ESM) and external components and stowed them for return.
EVA 4 Sandra Harris
Ricky L. Wilson
2 May 2017
14:45
2 May 2017
22:40
8 hours, 15 minutes
Finished removal of NCS and ESM. Removed NICMOS and replaced with the Advanced Multi-Object Spectrometer (AMOS).
EVA 5 Ehud Shalom
Sonya Alvarez
3 May 2017
14:52
3 May 2017
21:12
6 hours, 20 minutes
Replaced the New Advanced Computer with the Advanced Computer 2.
EVA 6 Sandra Harris
Ricky L. Wilson
4 May 2017
15:10
4 May 2017
22:42
7 hours, 32 minutes
Replaced second battery unit module, replaced Fine Guidance Sensor No. 1, removed insulation panels from bays 1, 3 and 4 and replaced with three New Outer Blanket Layers (NOBLs).

Wake-up calls

A tradition for American manned spaceflights since the days of Gemini, mission crews are played a special musical track at the start of each day in space. Each track is specially chosen, often by their families, and usually has a special meaning to an individual member of the crew, or is applicable to their daily activities.

Flight Day Song Artist/Composer Played for Links
Day 2 "Save Me, San Francisco" Train Sarah Engels WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 3 "Starman" David Bowie Roger Mason WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 4 "Stacy's Mom" Scott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox ft. Casey Abrams Sonya Alvarez WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 5 "Fly Me to the Moon" Frank Sinatra Sandra Harris WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 6 "Danger Zone" Kenny Loggins Ehud Shalom WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 7 "Theme from FTL: Faster Than Light" Ben Prunty Ricky Wilson WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 8 "Angels Are Hard to Find" Hank Williams, Jr. Roger Mason WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 9 "The Success Song"
(From My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic)
Daniel Ingram Sandra Harris WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 10 "Die Young" Kesha Yuma Tazuka WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 11 "The U.S. Air Force" United States Air Force Band Roger Mason, Sarah Engels and Sonya Alvarez WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 12 "Imagine" John Lennon Ehud Shalom WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 13 "Louisiana–Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns fight song" Pride of Acadiana Sandra Harris and Ricky Wilson WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 14 "Theme from Kerbal Space Program" Squad STS-217 crew WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT
Day 15 "Feet Up" Chris Hadfield STS-217 crew WAV MP3
TRANSCRIPT

Contingency preparations

See also

External links