NASA's Shuttle Atlantis Begins Mission to the Space Station

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09.09.06

Tracy Young/Allard Beutel
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468

RELEASE: 06-402

NASA'S SHUTTLE ATLANTIS BEGINS MISSION TO THE SPACE STATION

The Space Shuttle Atlantis and its six-member crew are on their way to 
the International Space Station after lifting-off from NASA's Kennedy 
Space Center, Fla., at 11:14:55 a.m. EDT Saturday.

"It's been almost four years, two Return to Flight missions, a 
tremendous amount of work by thousands of individuals to get the 
shuttle program back to where we are right now and that's on the 
verge of restarting the station assembly sequence," said Atlantis' 
Commander Brent Jett. "We're confident over the next few weeks, and 
few years for that matter, that NASA's going to prove to our nation, 
to our partners and our friends around the world that it was worth 
the wait and the sacrifice. We're ready to get to work."

The fuel cut-off sensor system, which malfunctioned and delayed 
Atlantis' scheduled Friday launch, performed normally Saturday. The 
engine cut-off, or ECO, sensor is one of four inside the liquid 
hydrogen section of the shuttle's external fuel tank.

Atlantis' flight, STS-115, will resume construction of the 
International Space Station. The shuttle and station crews will work 
with ground teams to install a girder-like structure, known as the 
P3/P4 truss aboard the station. The 35,000-pound piece includes a set 
of giant solar arrays, batteries and associated electronics. The 
arrays eventually will double the station's power capability.

Atlantis' crew includes Pilot Chris Ferguson and Mission Specialists 
Dan Burbank, Heide Stefanyshyn-Piper, Joe Tanner and Steve MacLean, a 
Canadian Space Agency astronaut. The shuttle is scheduled to dock 
with the station on Monday. Once Atlantis arrives, a day could be 
added to the 11-day mission for a focused inspection of the shuttle's 
heat shield.

For the latest information about the STS-115 mission and its crew, 
visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle

	
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