NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)002 File Name: 10063878.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: Title: STS-35 official crew portrait Description: The five astronauts and two payload specialists assigned to NASA's STS-35 mission, scheduled aboard Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, in the spring of this year, pose for their crew portrait. Astronaut Vance D. Brand, center front and holding STS-35 insignia, making his fourth flight in space and his third STS flight, will serve as mission commander. he is flanked on the front row by Pilot Guy S. Gardner and Mission Specialist (MS) John M. Lounge. On the back row (left to right) are MS Robert A.R. Parker, Payload Specialist Ronald A. Parise, MS Jeffrey A. Hoffman, and Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance. The crewmembers are wearing their orange launch and entry suits (LESs). NASA Photo ID: S86-38100 File Name: 10063879.jpg Film Type: 4x5 cn Date Taken: 10/02/86 Title: Official portrait of Astronaut Vance D. Brand Description: Official portrait of Astronaut Vance D. Brand. Brand is in the dark blue shuttle flight suit with his helmet under his arm and an American flag behind him. Above and to the right of his head is a view of the shuttle flying. NASA Photo ID: S90-32808 File Name: 10063880.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 03/28/90 Title: Official portrait of astronaut Guy S. Gardner Description: Official portrait of Guy S. Gardner, United States Air Force Colonel, member of Astronaut Class 9 (1980), and space shuttle pilot. Gardner wears a launch and entry suit (LES) with the helmet displayed on his left. NASA Photo ID: S81-29029 File Name: 10063881.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 03/24/81 Title: Official portrait of astronaut Robert A.R. Parker Description: Official portrait of astronaut Robert A.R. Parker. Parker, a member of Astronaut Class 6, wears a light blue flight suit and poses with a space shuttle orbiter model. NASA Photo ID: S86-42105 File Name: 10063882.jpg Film Type: 4x5 cn Date Taken: 12/04/86 Title: Official Portrait Astronaut Jeff Hoffman Description: Official Portrait Astronaut Jeff Hoffman in blue shuttle flight suit with model of shuttle on table next to him. Behind and to the left of Hoffman is an American flag. NASA Photo ID: S90-34032 File Name: 10063883.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 04/05/90 Title: Official portrait of Samuel T. Durrance Description: Official portrait of Samuel T. Durrance, Ph.D. and STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload specialist. Durrance wears launch and entry suit (LES) with helmet displayed on table at his left. NASA Photo ID: S80-42915 File Name: 10063884.jpg Film Type: 4x5 cn Date Taken: 12/15/80 Title: Offical portrait of Astronaut Candidate Mike Lounge Description: Offical portrait of Astronaut Candidate Mike Lounge wearing blue shuttle flight suit. NASA Photo ID: S90-31349 File Name: 10063885.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 03/09/90 Title: Official portrait of Ronald A. Parise, STS-35 payload specialist Description: Official portrait of Ronald A. Parise, STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, payload specialist. Parise wears a launch entry suit (LES) with the helmet positioned at his side. NASA Photo ID: S90-32051 File Name: 10063894.jpg Film Type: 120 CN Date Taken: 03/16/90 Title: STS-35 Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) equipment stowed on middeck Description: STS-35 Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment II (SAREX-II) window antenna is shown in its stowage location (inside the window shade & filter kit) on the middeck of JSC's Full Fuselage Trainer (FFT) located in the Mockup and Integration Laboratory (MAIL) Bldg 9A. The antenna was built at no cost to the government by the Motorola Amateur Radio Club in Schaumburg, Illinois. SAREX was designed to conduct shortwave radio transmissions between ground amateur radio operators and a licensed onboard operator (in this case, Parise). Parise's call letters are WA4SIR. SAREX will communicate with amateur stations in Line-of-Site (LOS) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, in one of four transmission modes: voice, Slow Scan Television (SSTV), data or (uplink only) Fast Scan Television (FSTV). SAREX is a jont effort of NASA and the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) / Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation (AMSAT). NASA Photo ID: S90-38626 File Name: 10063902.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/23/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, is towed to KSC VAB Description: Spectators and Kennedy Space Center (KSC) workers watch as Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, is towed atop a trailer to KSC's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). Once in the VAB, OV-102 will be bolted to the external tank (ET) on the mobile launcher platform. OV-102 is being prepared for STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) mission scheduled for launch in mid-May. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSC-90PC-690. NASA Photo ID: S90-42289 File Name: 10063903.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 07/03/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, rolls back to KSC VAB after hydrogen leak discovered Description: Kennedy Space Center (KSC) workers watch as Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, along with its external tank (ET) and two solid rocket boosters (SRBs) atop the giant crawler transporter, rolls back to KSC's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). The rollback was caused by a hydrogen leak that stopped the STS-35 countdown during ET fueling, 05-29-90. Once in the VAB, OV-102 and its stack will be demated, and OV-102, with its Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload aboard, will be moved to the Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF) to await return to KSC Launch Complex (LC) Pad 39A. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSC-90PC-901. NASA Photo ID: S90-42291 File Name: 10063904.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 07/03/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, rolls back to KSC VAB after hydrogen leak discovered Description: Riding a column of light, Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, its external tank (ET), and solid rocket boosters (SRBs), with a pastel dawn at their back, roll back to the Kennedy Space Center's (KSC's) Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). This unusual photograph was created by using a zoom technique that captured both actual and reflected light. OV-102, moving east to west, was on the move from KSC Launch Complex (LC) Pad 39A as the sun crested over the seashore's horizon. Following the rollback, OV-102 was demated from the ET and SRBs. OV-102 was placed in KSC's Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF) while engineers investigated the cause of a hydrogen leak that stopped the STS-35 launch countdown during tanking 05-29-90. NASA Photo ID: S90-37626 File Name: 10063905.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/16/90 Title: KSC photos of STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, and STS-31 Discovery, OV-103 at LC 39 Description: Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, and Discovery, OV-103, simulataneously occupy two launch pads at Launch Complex (LC) 39 for only the second time in the space shuttle program history. OV-102 is pictured in the foreground on LC pad 39A with OV-103 on LC pad 39B in the background. Views were provided by KSC with alternate numbers KSC-90PC-634 and KSC-90PC-635. NASA Photo ID: S90-37625 File Name: 10063906.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/16/90 Title: KSC photos of STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, and STS-31 Discovery, OV-103 at LC 39 Description: Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, and Discovery, OV-103, simulataneously occupy two launch pads at Launch Complex (LC) 39 for only the second time in the space shuttle program history. OV-102 is pictured in the foreground on LC pad 39A with OV-103 on LC pad 39B in the background. Views were provided by KSC with alternate numbers KSC-90PC-634 and KSC-90PC-635. NASA Photo ID: S90-46555 File Name: 10063907.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 08/22/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, passes STS-38 Atlantis, OV-104, heading to Pad 39A Description: Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, slated for mission STS-35, left, rolls past Atlantis, OV-104, on its way to Kennedy Space Center (KSC) launch pad 39A. OV-104, being readied for STS-38, is parked in front of the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) following its rollback from the pad for liquid hydrogen (LH2) line repairs. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSC-90PC-1152. NASA Photo ID: S88-54116 File Name: 10063909.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 11/30/88 Title: JSC Amateur Radio Club insignia (logo) Description: This is the official insignia for the Johnson Space Center's (JSC's) Amateur Radio Club. NASA Photo ID: S90-38107 File Name: 10063910.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/22/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 Payload Control Room in MSFC POCC Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) Payload Control Room located in the Marshall Space Flight Center's (MSFC's) Payload Operations Control Center (POCC). Controllers at various consoles monitor ASTRO-1 data. NASA Photo ID: S90-38109 File Name: 10063911.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/22/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 MS Parker and Payload Specialist Durrance train at MSFC Description: STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker (left) and Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance practice Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) experiment procedures in a space shuttle aft flight deck mockup in the Payload Crew Training Complex at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Alabama. For all Spacelab missions, shuttle crew members train regularly in the facility in preparation to operate experiments on their Spacelab missions. The ASTRO-1 crew will operate the ultraviolet telescopes and instrument pointing system (IPS) from Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, aft flight deck. The seven-member ASTRO-1 crew will work around the clock, in 12-hour shifts, to allow the maximum number of observations to be made during their nine or ten days in orbit. In addition to the commander and pilot, the crew consistss of three MSs and two payload specialists. (MSs are career astronauts who are trained in a specialized field. Payload specialists are members of the science investigator teams who were nominated by their peers to operate their experiments on orbit. They are trained and certified for flight by NASA.) View provided by MSFC with alternate number 9005803. NASA Photo ID: S90-47873 File Name: 10063923.jpg Film Type: 120 CN Date Taken: 09/11/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, aft fuselage LRU hydrogen recirculation pump Description: Closeup view shows the aft fuselage line replaceable unit (LRU) hydrogen recirculation pump from Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. The pump is being tested at JSC's Thermochemical Test Area (TTA) Support Laboratory Bldg 350. JSC technicians ran the pump package through the battery of leak tests. Preliminary indications showed only minor, acceptable leakage from the package and Kennedy Space Center (KSC) technicians have replaced a crushed seal on the prevalve of the main propulsion system they believe may have caused the STS-35 hydrogen leak. NASA Photo ID: S90-36708 File Name: 10063925.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/07/90 Title: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) in OV-102's payload bay at KSC Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) view shows its telescopes, instrument pointing system (IPS), and support equipment installed in Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, payload bay (PLB) at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF). In the foreground is the Spacelab Pallet System (SPS) igloo. The stowed IPS with its three ultraviolet telescopes appears in the center of the picture. In the background, the Broad Band X Ray Telescope (BBXRT) two axis pointing system (TAPS) is barely visible. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSC-90PC-423. NASA Photo ID: S90-36707 File Name: 10063926.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/07/90 Title: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) in OV-102's payload bay at KSC Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) is installed in Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, payload bay (PLB) at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF). On the left, in the aft PLB is the Broad Band X Ray Telescope (BBXRT) mounted on the two axis pointing system (TAPS). In the center, the three ultraviolet telescopes - Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE), the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT), and the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) - are mounted on the instrument pointing system (IPS) and are in stowed position. At the far right is the Spacelab Pallet System (SPS) igloo. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSSC-90PC-421. NASA Photo ID: S90-36706 File Name: 10063927.jpg Film Type: 4x5 CN Date Taken: 05/07/90 Title: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) telescopes at KSC processing facility Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload is processed at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) facility. In the foreground, mounted on a two-axis pointing system (TAPS) is the Broad Band X Ray Telescope (BBXRT). Only one of the three ultraviolet telescopes mounted on the instrument pointing system (IPS) is visible - the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT). Above the UIT is a star tracker (AST). ASTRO-1 telescopes on unpressurized pallets (u-pallets) will be inserted in Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, payload bay (PLB). The STS-35 payload is the first horizontal payload flown since late 1985. View provided by KSC with alternate number KSC-90PC-398. NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)017 File Name: 10063928.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, crew eats preflight breakfast at KSC O&C Bldg Description: STS-35 crewmembers eat preflight breakfast at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Operations and Checkout (O&C) Building before boarding Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Sitting around table (left to right) are Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker, Payload Specialist Ronald A. Parise, Pilot Guy S. Gardner, Commander Vance D. Brand, Payload Specialist Sameul T. Durrance, MS Jeffrey A. Hoffman, and MS John M. Lounge. A cake decorated with the STS-35 mission insignia and silk flowers arranged in a shuttle model's payload bay (PLB) are in the center of the table. NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)016 File Name: 10063929.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 crew leaves KSC O&C Bldg and boards van for transport to LC Pad 39A Description: STS-35 Commander Vance D. Brand (right) leads the STS-35 crewmembers toward a transfer van that will take them from the nearby Operations and Checkout (O&C) Building to Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Launch Complex (LC) Pad 39B. Trailing Brand (left to right) are Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker, Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance, Payload Specialist Ronald A. Parise, MS John M. Lounge, MS Jeffrey A. Hoffman, and Pilot Guy S. Gardner. The crewmembers are wearing their orange launch and entry suits (LESs). NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)020 File Name: 10063930.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, lifts off from KSC LC Pad 39B at 1:49 am (EST) Description: STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, atop its external tank (ET) and flanked by two solid rocket boosters (SRBs) lifts off from Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Launch Complex (LC) Pad 39B at 1:49 am (Eastern Standard Time (EST)). OV-102 rises above mobile launcher pad as an exhaust cloud, illuminated by the glow of the SRB and space shuttle main engine (SSME) firings, covers the launch pad area. The launch tower's fixed service structure (FSS) and retracted rotating service structure (RSS) are highlighted against the early morning darkness by SRB/SSME glow and tower spotlights. NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)021 File Name: 10063931.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, OV-102, lifts off from KSC LC Pad 39B at 1:49 am (EST) Description: STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, atop its external tank (ET) and flanked by two solid rocket boosters (SRBs) clears the launch tower during its liftoff from Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Launch Complex (LC) Pad 39B at 1:49 am (Eastern Standard Time (EST)). OV-102 rises above the mobile launcher pad covered with an exhaust cloud which is illuminated by the glow of the SRB and space shuttle main engine (SSME) firings. The launch tower's fixed service structure (FSS) and retracted rotating service structure (RSS) are highlighted against the early morning darkness by SRB/SSME glow as the shadowy shuttle climbs into the sky. NASA Photo ID: STS035-503-007 File Name: 10063932.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 crewmembers pose on OV-102's middeck for onboard crew potrait Description: STS-35 crewmembers, wearing TAKE PRIDE IN AMERICA t-shirts, pose on Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, middeck for onboard (in-space) crew potrait. Clockwise from the bottom center are Commander Vance D. Brand, Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker, Payload Specialist Ronald A. Parise, MS Jeffrey A. Hoffman, Pilot Guy S. Gardner, MS John M. Lounge, and Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance. NASA Photo ID: STS035-10-015 File Name: 10063933.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 aft flight deck of Columbia, OV-102, with an array of camera equipment Description: STS-35 aft flight deck onorbit station and mission station are covered with photographic equipment, cameras, and binoculars for earth observation and Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) documentation. The equipment velcroed to the control panels of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, includes Hasselblad, 35mm, and Arriflex cameras, lenses and camera brackets. NASA Photo ID: STS035-03-007 File Name: 10063934.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 MS Parker with DTO 0634 EDO trash compactor on OV-102's middeck Description: Flown for the first time, Development Test Objective (DTO) 0634 Trash Compaction and Retention System Demostration extended duration orbiter (EDO) trash compactor is operated by Mission Specialist Robert A.R. Parker on the middeck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. The middeck scene represents an "after" picture of what happens to a large bag of trash during compaction. The EDO trash compactor occupies one middeck locker and consists of a geared mechanism that allows manual compaction of wet and dry trash. The apparatus was flown as a demonstration, designed to assess the feasibility of inflight compaction of trash and crew-related debris. NASA Photo ID: STS035-05-036 File Name: 10063935.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 Commander Brand talks to family using SAREX on OV-102's middeck Description: STS-35 Commander Vance D. Brand, wearing headset, communicates with family members using Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) on Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, middeck. SAREX and its portable laptop computer mounted on the outside of the middeck sleep station allowed the STS-35 crewmembers to "visit" and briefly share some of their inspace experiences with family members. It also provided radio transmissions between ground based amateur radio operators around the world and OV-102. The experiment enabled students from all over the United States to have a chance to communicate with a crewmember in space. NASA Photo ID: STS035-16-003 File Name: 10063936.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 Pilot Gardner in sleep station compartment on OV-102's middeck Description: STS-35 Pilot Guy S. Gardner demonstrates the bunk-style sleep compartments onboard Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, middeck. Gardner uses bunk #2 of the sleep station located against the middeck starboard wall. NASA Photo ID: STS035-20-006 File Name: 10063937.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/11/90 Title: STS-35 crewmembers in sleep station compartments on OV-102's middeck Description: Though they are not actually asleep, three STS-35 crewmembers demonstrate the bunk-style sleep compartments onboard Columbia's, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102's, middeck. From top to bottom are Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance, Mission Specialist (MS) Jeffrey A. Hoffman, and MS John M. Lounge. At the left is the shuttle amateur radio experiment (SAREX). The crew escape pole (CES) is visible overhead and the open airlock hatch in the foreground. The sleep station is located against the middeck starboard wall. NASA Photo ID: STS035-10-011 File Name: 10063945.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 Mission Specialist Parker operates ASTRO-1 MPC on OV-102's flight deck Description: STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker operates Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) manual pointing controller (MPC) on the aft flight deck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Parker monitors a closed circuit television (CCTV) screen at the payload station as he uses the MPC to send data collection instructions to the ASTRO-1 instrument pointing system (IPS). NASA Photo ID: STS035-71-019 File Name: 10063946.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's payload bay (PLB) Description: During the STS-35 mission, the Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload, in its onorbit operating configuration, is documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. In the center of the frame, three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are the star tracker (S TRK) (silver cone at left), the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) (behind S TRK), and the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) (at right). In the foreground and in front of the unpressurized spacelab pallet (U-pallet) is the igloo, a pressurized cylindrical container that houses the subsystems that provide such services as power, telemetry and commands to the instruments. NASA Photo ID: STS035-506-008 File Name: 10063947.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's payload bay (PLB) Description: During the STS-35 mission, the Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload, in its onorbit operating configuration, is documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. In the center of the frame, three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are Integrated Radiator System (IRS) (silver box on left), the Optical Sensor Package (OSP) (above IRS), the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT), and the star tracker (S TRK) (far right). In the foreground and in front of the unpressurized spacelab pallet (U-pallet) is the igloo, a pressurized cylindrical container that houses the subsystems that provide such services as power, telemetry and commands to the instruments. NASA Photo ID: STS035-81-032 File Name: 10063948.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's payload bay (PLB) Description: During the STS-35 mission, the Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload, in its onorbit operating configuration, is documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. In the center of the frame, three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are the Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE) (top left), the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) (behind WUPPE), the Integrated Radiator System (IRS) (silver box on right), and the Optical Sensor Package (OSP) (above IRS). In the foreground and in front of the unpressurized spacelab pallet (U-pallet) is the igloo, a pressurized cylindrical container that houses the subsystems that provide such services as power, telemetry and commands to the instruments. On top of the vertical stabilizer (tail), the Shuttle Infrared Leeside Temperature Sensing (SILTS) system is seen. The moon appears in the distant background (above and to the left of the tail). NASA Photo ID: STS035-35-007 File Name: 10063949.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's PLB with RCS firing Description: During the STS-35 mission, the Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) payload, in its onorbit operating configuration in the payload bay (PLB), is silhouetted against the firing of a reaction control system (RCS) jet. In the center of the frame, three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are Integrated Radiator System (IRS) (silver box on left), the Optical Sensor Package (OSP) (above IRS), the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT), and the star tracker (S TRK) (far right). A right RCS jet is fired during this maneuver of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. NASA Photo ID: STS035-13-008 File Name: 10063950.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's payload bay (PLB) Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) telescopes are documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, and backdropped against the cloud-covered surface of the Earth. In the center of the frame are three ultraviolet telescopes mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are the Integrated Radiator System (IRS) (silver box at left), the Optical Sensor Package (OSP) (above IRS), the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT), and the Star Tracker (S TRK) (at far right). In the foreground and in front of the unpressurized spacelab pallet (U-pallet) is the igloo, a pressurized cylindrical container that houses subsystems that provide such services as power, telemetry and commands to the instruments. NASA Photo ID: STS035-604-058 File Name: 10063951.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 telescopes documented in OV-102's payload bay (PLB) Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) telescopes, in onorbit configuration, are documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, and backdropped against the blue and white surface of the Earth. In the center of the frame are three ultraviolet telescopes mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible on the cruciform are the star tracker (S TRK) (silver cone at far left), the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT), and the Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE) (at top right). In the foreground and located at the head of the unpressurized spacelab pallet (U-pallet) is the igloo, a pressurized cylindrical container that houses subsystems that provide such services as power, telemetry and commands to the instruments. NASA Photo ID: STS035-28-022 File Name: 10063952.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 in OV-102's payload bay backdropped against Orion nebula Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) telescopes, in onorbit operating configuration, are documented in the payload bay (PLB) of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. To the right of the ASTRO-1 components is the Orion nebula. Three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Visible here are the star tracker (S TRK) (silver cone at the far left), the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT), and the Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE) (at top right). NASA Photo ID: STS035-28-006 File Name: 10063953.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 ASTRO-1 in OV-102's payload bay silhouetted against RCS firing Description: STS-35 Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) telescopes, in onorbit operating position in the payload bay (PLB), are silhouetted against an reaction control system (RCS) right thrustor firing. Three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely coaligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to the instrument pointing system (IPS). Here the IPS holds the telescopes in a position that is parallel to the Earth's limb below. Visible on the cruciform are the star tracker (S TRK) (silver cone at the top), the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) (behind S TRK), and the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT). NASA Photo ID: STS035-12-005 File Name: 10063954.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 stowage volume G with contingency water container (CWC) onboard OV-102 Description: During STS-35, middeck stowage volume G and a contingency water container (CWC) were utilized to remedy a problem onboard Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. A hose connecting OV-102's waste water system to the CWC was used in order to bypass a suspected clog in the line from the waste water tank to the exit nozzle. On flight day seven, Pilot Guy S. Gardner carried out an inflight maintenance (IFM) procedure by connecting a spare hose from the line to the container. The CWC is a rubber-lined duffle bag that holds about 95 pounds of water and is used in situations where water cannot be dumped overboard normally. NASA Photo ID: STS035-09-002 File Name: 10063955.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 crewmembers eat meal on the middeck of Columbia, OV-102 Description: Enjoying a meal on the middeck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, are STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker (foreground), Payload Specialist Ronald A. Parise (center), and Commander Vance D. Brand. Parker spoons up bite from his food container as Parise lets a spoonful freefloat into his open mouth and Brand balances his meal tray assembly. The forward lockers, the shuttle treadmill, and the starboard side sleep station are seen in the view. NASA Photo ID: STS035-15-035 File Name: 10063956.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 crewmembers watch a sphere of water float on OV-102's middeck Description: STS-35 crewmembers perform a microgravity experiment using their drinking water while on the middeck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Mission Specialist (MS) Jeffrey A. Hoffman (left) has released some water from a drinking container which he holds in his hand. MS John M. Lounge (wearing glasses, center) and Payload Specialist Samuel T. Durrance along with Hoffman study the changing shape and movement of the sphere of water. NASA Photo ID: STS035-10-005 File Name: 10063958.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 MS Hoffman & Pilot Gardner "commute" to work on the middeck of OV-102 Description: STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Jeffrey A. Hoffman (front) and Pilot Guy S. Gardner, holding Development Test Objective (DTO) 634 trash compactor handles to the ceiling, "commute" to work on the middeck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Just below Hoffman's right elbow in locker MF43G DTO 634, Trash Compaction and Retention System Demonstration, trash compactor with a geared mechanism that allows manual compaction of wet and dry trash is visible. Also in the view are the stowed treadmill on the middeck floor and the starboard side sleep station. NASA Photo ID: STS035-12-015 File Name: 10063960.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 MS Hoffman operates ASTRO-1 MPC on OV-102's aft flight deck Description: STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Jeffrey A. Hoffman, wearing headset and monitoring closed circuit television (CCTV) display screen, operates the Astronomy Laboratory 1 (ASTRO-1) manual pointing controller (MPC) on the aft flight deck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. MPC is used to position the instrument pointing system (IPS) and its three ultraviolet telescopes in OV-102's payload bay (PLB). Hoffman and other crewmembers were able to command the IPS to record astronomical data using the MPC. At Hoffman's left are the onorbit station control panels and the two aft flight deck viewing windows W9 and W10. NASA Photo ID: S90-50873 File Name: 10063975.jpg Film Type: 4X5 CN Date Taken: 10/23/90 Title: Artist concept titled "STS-35 Deorbit & Reentry Track" produced by Rockwell Description: Rockwell International (RI) supplied artist concept titled "STS-35 Deorbit & Reentry Track". Map tracks Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, from deorbit over Madagasgar through atmospheric reentry maneuvers to touchdown at Edwards Air Force Base (EAFB), California. NASA Photo ID: S90-50872 File Name: 10063976.jpg Film Type: 4X5 CN Date Taken: 10/23/90 Title: Artist concept titled "STS-35 Descent Over California" produced by Rockwell Description: Rockwell International (RI) supplied artist concept titled "STS-35 Descent over California" shows Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, approach to Edwards Air Force Base (EAFB), California. Annotated ground track map identifies major events in landing sequence starting at touchdown minus (-) 10 minutes to weight on main landing gear (MLG) runway 17. NASA Photo ID: STS035-515-003 File Name: 10063977.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 Pilot Gardner with descent checklist on OV-102's forward flight deck Description: STS-35 Pilot Guy S. Gardner, wearing his launch and entry suit (LES), reviews descent checklist while at the pilots station on the forward flight deck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Crewmembers are conducting procedures related to the final stages of the mission and the landing sequence. Silhouetted in forward windows W4 and W5 are the head up display (HUD), flight mirror assembly, and a drinking water bag with straw. NASA Photo ID: STS035-515-004 File Name: 10063978.jpg Film Type: 70mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 MS Parker & MS Lounge on OV-102's flight deck review deorbit checklist Description: STS-35 Mission Specialist (MS) Robert A.R. Parker (left) and MS John M. Lounge, wearing launch and entry suits (LESs) and launch and entry helmets (LEHs), are in their entry seating positions on the aft flight deck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. The two crewmembers are reviewing deorbit checklists as they prepare for the final stages of their mission and the landing sequence. NASA Photo ID: STS035(S)089 File Name: 10063981.jpg Film Type: 35mm CN Date Taken: 12/10/90 Title: STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, makes night landing at EAFB, Calif Description: The night landing sequence of STS-35 Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, is captured in this series of photographs. Darkness surrounds OV-102 as it nears touchdown on concrete runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base (EAFB), California (STS035(S)088 and STS035(S)090). At touchdown, dust surges upward behind OV-102 (STS035(S)089). Main landing gear (MLG) hit the runway at 9:54:09 pm (Pacific Standard Time (PST)). Only OV-102' silhouette illuminated by the runway lights is visible during the landing sequence. NASA Photo ID: S90-55294 File Name: 10063985.jpg Film Type: 120 CN Date Taken: 12/21/90 Title: Air-to-air view of Columbia, OV-102, atop SCA NASA 905 flying over JSC site Description: Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102, mounted piggyback atop Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) NASA 905 is captured in this air-to-air view as it flies over the JSC site. The OV-102/SCA combination were en route to Florida from California following the successful STS-35 mission. Almost the entire 1625-acre site of JSC is visible below and in the background, along with a number of businesses and residences in the nearby municipality of Nassau Bay. This flyover photo was taken by NASA JSC Image Sciences Division (ISD) photographer Clarence P. Stanley who was a passenger in a T-38 jet aircraft.