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SPACECRAFT ACCIDENTS: EXAMINING THE PAST, IMPROVING THE FUTURE Intelsat VI Recovery with STS- 49 (Endeavour) Bryan Palaszewski working with the Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center
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Bryan Palaszewski working with the Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Jan 27, 2016

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SPACECRAFT ACCIDENTS: EXAMINING THE PAST, IMPROVING THE FUTURE Intelsat VI Recovery with STS-49 (Endeavour). Bryan Palaszewski working with the Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center. Intelsat VI Recovery (1/3). Launch: March 14, 1990. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

SPACECRAFT ACCIDENTS: EXAMINING THE PAST, IMPROVING

THE FUTURE

Intelsat VI Recovery with STS-49 (Endeavour)

Bryan Palaszewski working with the

Digital Learning NetworkNASA Glenn Research Center

Page 2: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Recovery (1/3)

• Launch: March 14, 1990.• Mission: High-power commercial

communications satellite.• Problem: Satellite was stranded in low

Earth orbit after failure of a rocket booster.• Launch: INTELSAT-VI (F-3) was

launched by a commercial Titan III rocket.

Page 3: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Recovery (2/3) • A launch vehicle malfunction left the

Titan's second stage attached to the satellite, thus prohibiting the firing of a solid rocket motor that was to raise it to geostationary orbit.

• Satellite controllers later jettisoned the solid rocket motor with the Titan second stage attached and raised the satellite to its current orbit.

Page 4: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center
Page 5: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Recovery (3/3) • Launched on May 7, 1992, STS-49 carried

the equipment to capture, repair, and redeploy (release) the Intelsat IV satellite.

• Astronauts used many tools, as well as their gloved hands, to stop the satellite.

• They attached a new rocket booster to the satellite and released it on May 15, 1992.

• Satellite was then boosted to it’s final geostationary orbit.

Page 6: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center
Page 7: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center
Page 8: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

STS-49 Endeavour Crew • Commander Dan Brandenstein • Pilot Kevin Chilton• Mission Specialists

–Pierre Thuot –Rick Hieb –Kathy Thornton –Tom Akers–Bruce Melnick

Page 9: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Space Shuttle Equipment for Intelsat VI Recovery

• Perigee Kick Motor (PKM), which weighed 23,000 pounds.

• Capture Bar Assembly, which was designed by NASA Johnson and weighed 162 pounds.

• A cradle, designed to hold the perigee kick motor in Endeavour's cargo bay during launch, weighed 3,749 pounds.

• The docking adapter, which allowed attachment of the perigee kick motor to the INTELSAT- VI, weighed 152.8 pounds.

Page 10: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Operations (1/3)

• Capture required three EVAs. • First space walk was conducted on

flight day four by Thuot, who was unable to attach capture bar to INTELSAT using a remote manipulator system arm.

• Second unscheduled but identical attempt by Thuot failed the following day.

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Page 17: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Operations (2/3)

• After rest on flight day six, unprecedented three-person EVA performed on flight day seven.

• During longest EVA in U.S. space history to date (8 hours, 29 minutes), Hieb, Thuot, and Akers grasped rotating INTELSAT by hand while Brandenstein maneuvered the orbiter.

Page 18: Bryan Palaszewski  working with the  Digital Learning Network NASA Glenn Research Center

Intelsat VI Operations (3/3)

• After capture bar attached to satellite, orbiter remote manipulator system arm grappled bar and placed satellite atop perigee kick motor (PKM) in cargo bay.

• Satellite deployed early on flight day eight, and INTELSAT controllers signaled PKM to fire, sending INTELSAT VI into operating orbit of 45,000 nautical miles (83,340 kilometers).

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