NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)001 File Name: 10097231.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 11/01/93 Title: STS-60 crew patch Description: The design of the crew patch for NASA's STS-60 mission depicts the Space Shuttle Discovery's on-orbit configuration. The American and Russian flags symbolize the partnership of the two countries and their crew members taking flight into space together for the first time. The open payload bay contains: the Space Habitation Module (Spacehab), a commercial space laboratory for life and material science experiments; and a Getaway Special Bridge Assembly in the aft section carrying various experiments, both deployable and attached. A scientific experiment to create and measure an ultra-vacuum environment and perform semiconductor material science -- the Wake Shield Facility -- is shown on the Remote Manipulator System (RMS) prior to deployment. NASA Photo ID: S91-48556 File Name: 10097241.gif Film Type: 120 220 cn Date Taken: 12/01/91 Title: Low angle view of Wake Shield Facility on test stand at JSC Description: Low angle view of the Wake Shield Facility pictured on a test stand at JSC. NASA Photo ID: S91-48559 File Name: 10097243.gif Film Type: 120 220 cn Date Taken: 12/01/91 Title: Wake Shield Facility on test stand at JSC Description: Pictured on a test stand at JSC is the Wake Shield Facility scheduled to fly on STS-60. NASA Photo ID: S91-48560 File Name: 10097244.gif Film Type: 120 220 cn Date Taken: 12/01/91 Title: Wake Shield Facility on test stand at JSC Description: Pictured on a test stand at JSC is the Wake Shield Facility scheduled to fly on STS-60. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)104 File Name: 10097262.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: Launch of STS-60 Shuttle Discovery Description: Launch Complex 39 is in partial darkness as the Space Shuttle Discovery heads toward an eight-day mission in Earth orbit. Liftoff occurred as scheduled at 7:10 a.m., February 3, 1994. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)105 File Name: 10097263.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: Launch of STS-60 Shuttle Discovery Description: Launch Complex 39 is in partial darkness as the Space Shuttle Discovery heads toward an eight-day mission in Earth orbit. Liftoff occurred as scheduled at 7:10 a.m., February 3, 1994. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)106 File Name: 10097264.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: Launch of STS-60 Shuttle Discovery Description: Palm trees are silhouetted in the foreground in this 70mm image as the Space Shuttle Discovery heads toward an eight-day mission in Earth orbit. Liftoff occurred as scheduled at 7:10 a.m., February 3, 1994. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)107 File Name: 10097265.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: Launch of STS-60 Shuttle Discovery as seen from Shuttle Training Aircraft Description: A pre-dawn sky above the Atlantic Ocean serves as the backdrop for the Space Shuttle Discovery as it heads toward an eight-day mission in Earth orbit. The photo was taken with a handheld 70mm camera in the Shuttle training aircraft by Robert L. Gibson, chief of the Astronaut Office at JSC. Liftoff occurred as scheduled at 7:10 a.m., February 3, 1994. NASA Photo ID: STS060-09-024 File Name: 10097530.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: View of the Wake Shield Facility back dropped against the Southern Lights Description: As the Space Shuttle Discovery flew over a point between New Zealand and Australia, one of the STS-60 crew members used a 35mm camera to capture this image featuring three-fourths of the disc of the Wake Shield Facility (WSF) back dropped against the Southern Lights. The WSF was in the grasp of the Remote Manipulator System (RMS) end effector (out of frame at right). NASA Photo ID: STS060-09-036 File Name: 10097542.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/09/94 Title: Aurora Australis or Southern Lights as seen from STS-60 Shuttle Discovery Description: The Astronauts and Cosmonaut aboard Space Shuttle Discovery observed the display of the Aurora Australis or Southern Lights. The multi-hued shafts of light, extending upward to 200 miles above the Earth's surface, are caused by beams of energetic electrons colliding with the oxygen and nitrogen in the Earth's upper atmosphere. The strong red glow occurs at the highest altitude where the air is least dense and composed mostly of oxygen. At lower altitudes, the greater density favors the green color, also produced by atomic oxygen. Sometimes at the bottom (the lowest altitude of the aurora) a pink border is produced by nitrogen. NASA Photo ID: STS060-15-003 File Name: 10097690.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/03/94 Title: View of payloads in the STS-60 Discovery's payload bay while in orbit Description: Photographic documentation of the major payloads of the Space Shuttle Discovery's STS-60 mission, backdropped against clouds over the Atlantic Ocean. In the foreground is the SPACEHAB module, with the Wake Shield Facility (WSF) partially visible in its berthed position near the Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) pods and the vertical stabilizer. Television cameras on the Remote Manipulator System (RMS) were being used for a survey of the cargo. NASA Photo ID: STS060-93-043 File Name: 10099019.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/09/94 Title: BREMSAT satellite launched from STS-60 Discovery cargo bay Description: BREMSAT, a 140 pound (63 kilogram) satellite, quickly leaves the cargo bay of the Space Shuttle Discovery. The 480mm (19 inch) deployable satellite was built by the University of Bremen's Center of Applied Space Technology and Microgravity (ZARM) under sponsorship of the German Space Agency (DARA). A modified ejection system in one of the payload bay's getaway special (GAS) type canisters aided the STS-60 crew members in deploying the satellite toward the end of their eight-day mission in Earth orbit. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)037 File Name: 10099883.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/11/94 Title: Landing of STS-60 Space Shuttle Discovery at Kennedy Space Center Description: The drag chute for Space Shuttle Discovery is deployed on the Shuttle Landing Facility, marking the end to the eight-day STS-60 mission. Landing occurred at 2:19:22 p.m. (035); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery touches down on the Shuttle Landing Facility (036); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery is about to touch down on the Shuttle Landing Facility. Note the Shuttle Training Aircraft (STA) monitoring the landing phase of the mission (037). NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)036 File Name: 10099884.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/11/94 Title: Landing of STS-60 Space Shuttle Discovery at Kennedy Space Center Description: The drag chute for Space Shuttle Discovery is deployed on the Shuttle Landing Facility, marking the end to the eight-day STS-60 mission. Landing occurred at 2:19:22 p.m. (035); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery touches down on the Shuttle Landing Facility (036); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery is about to touch down on the Shuttle Landing Facility. Note the Shuttle Training Aircraft (STA) monitoring the landing phase of the mission (037). NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)035 File Name: 10099885.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/11/94 Title: Landing of STS-60 Space Shuttle Discovery at Kennedy Space Center Description: The drag chute for Space Shuttle Discovery is deployed on the Shuttle Landing Facility, marking the end to the eight-day STS-60 mission. Landing occurred at 2:19:22 p.m. (035); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery touches down on the Shuttle Landing Facility (036); The main landing gear on the Space Shuttle Discovery is about to touch down on the Shuttle Landing Facility. Note the Shuttle Training Aircraft (STA) monitoring the landing phase of the mission (037). NASA Photo ID: STS060-54-018 File Name: 20119282.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 02/05/94 Title: Wake Shield Facility in grasp of the Remote Manipulator System Description: A wintry scene of Lake Winnipeg and surrounding area in Manitoba, Canada forms the backdrop for the Wake Shield Facility (WSF) in the grasp of the Canadian-built Remote Manipulator System (RMS) arm. The image was exposed with a 35mm camera through one of the windows on Discovery's aft flight deck. NASA Photo ID: STS060-73-038 File Name: 20120328.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/09/94 Title: Pack ice along the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia as seen from STS-60 Description: Pack ice is documented in this photograph along the coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula of Russia in Zaliv Ozernoj. Detailed photographs of the ice provide information to scientists in both Russia and the United States about the location and fluctuation of ice edges, and how this new sea ice interacts with ocean and littoral currents. NASA Photo ID: STS060-74-054 File Name: 20120447.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/09/94 Title: Wake Shield Facility in grasp of the Remote Manipulator System Description: The Wake Shield Facility (WSF) is held in the grasp of Discovery's Remote Manipulator System (RMS). The 70mm image, backdropped against the blackness of space, also shows the SPACEHAB module in the forward cargo area. NASA Photo ID: STS060-76-095 File Name: 20120686.gif Film Type: 70mm cn Date Taken: 02/09/94 Title: Ram side of Wake Shield Facility Description: The ram side of the Wake Shield Facility (WSF) is in the grasp of the Space Shuttle Discovery's Remote Manipulator System (RMS) arm in this 70mm frame. Clouds over the Atlantic Ocean and the blackness of space share the backdrop for the picture. NASA Photo ID: STS060(S)002 File Name: 10097232.gif Film Type: 35mm cn Date Taken: 12/01/93 Title: STS-60 crew portrait Description: Five NASA astronauts and a Russian Cosmonaut take a break from training for their scheduled flight in space to pose for the traditional crew portrait. In the front (left to right) are Astronauts Kenneth S. Reightler Jr., and Charles F. Bolden Jr., pilot and commander, respectively. On middle row are Astronauts Franklin R. Chang-Diaz and N. Jan Davis, mission specialists. On back row are Astronaut Ronald M. Sega (left) and Russia's Sergei K. Krikalev, both mission specialists. NASA Photo ID: S93-42398 File Name: 10097234.gif Film Type: 4x5 cn Date Taken: 10/09/87 Title: Portrait of Astronaut Kenneth S. Reightler Jr. Description: Portrait of Astronaut Kenneth S. Reightler Jr., in orange launch and entry suit. NASA Photo ID: S92-45896 File Name: 10097236.gif Film Type: 4x5 cn Date Taken: 09/21/92 Title: Portrait of Astronaut Ronald M. Sega Description: Portrait of Astronaut Ronald M. Sega in blue flight suit. NASA Photo ID: S93-40675 File Name: 10097238.gif Film Type: 120 cn Date Taken: 08/06/93 Title: Official portrait of Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev Description: Official portrait of Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev in orange launch and entry suit holding helmet in hands with American and Russian flags in background. NASA Photo ID: S93-27942 File Name: 10097239.gif Film Type: 120 cn Date Taken: 02/18/93 Title: Official portrait of Cosmonaut Vladimir Titov Description: Official portrait of Cosmonaut Vladimir Titov in orange launch and entry suit holding helmet in hands with American and Russian flags in background.