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STS-36 was a NASA Space Shuttle mission, during which Space Shuttle Atlantis carried a classified payload for the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) (believed to have been a Misty reconnaissance satellite) into orbit. STS-36 was the 34th shuttle mission overall, the sixth flight for Atlantis, and the fourth night launch of the shuttle program. It launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on February 28, 1990, and landed on March 4, 1990.

CrewEdit

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Crew seat assignmentsEdit

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Launch Landing File:Space Shuttle seating plan.svg
Seats 1–4 are on the flight deck.
Seats 5–7 are on the mid-deck.
1 Creighton
2 Casper
3 Thuot Mullane
4 Hilmers
5 Mullane Thuot
6 Unused
7 Unused

Mission summaryEdit

File:STS-36 Rollout - GPN-2000-000680.jpg
Space Shuttle Atlantis is prepared for launch on January 25, 1990.

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Atlantis launched on the STS-36 mission on February 28, 1990, at 07:50:22Template:NbspUTC (2:50:22Template:NbspamTemplate:NbspEST, local time at the launch site).<ref name="Recer 2/28/1990">Template:Cite news</ref> The launch was originally set for February 22, 1990, but was postponed repeatedly due to the illness of the crew commander and poor weather conditions. This was the first time since Apollo 13 in 1970 that a crewed space mission was affected by the illness of a crew member.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The first rescheduled launch attempt, set for February 25, 1990, was scrubbed at T−31 seconds due to a range safety computer malfunction.<ref name="sts-36-mr">Template:Cite tech report</ref>Template:Reference page<ref name="Sawyer">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Healy">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Mullane 2006">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Page needed Another attempt, set for February 26, 1990, was scrubbed during the T−9 minute hold due to weather conditions.<ref name="sts-36-mr" />Template:Reference page<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The successful launch on February 28, 1990, was set for a classified launch window, lying within a launch period extending from 00:00 to 04:00 EST. The launch weight for this mission was classified.<ref name="STIsummary">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:PD-notice</ref>Template:Reference page

The launch trajectory was unique to this flight and allowed the mission to reach an orbital inclination of 62°, the deployment orbit of its payload — the normal maximum inclination for a shuttle flight was 57°. This so-called "dog-leg" trajectory saw Atlantis fly downrange on a normal launch azimuth and then maneuver to a higher launch azimuth once out over the water. Although the maneuver resulted in a reduction of vehicle performance, it was the only way to reach the required deployment orbit from Kennedy Space Center (originally, the flight had been slated to launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, until the shuttle launch program there was cancelled). The payload was considered to be of importance to national security, leading normal flight rules to be suspended, allowing the shuttle to fly over or near Cape Hatteras, Cape Cod, and parts of Canada.

As a Department of Defense operation, STS-36's payload remains officially classified. STS-36 launched a single satellite,<ref name="Misty">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:PD-notice</ref> also described as AFP-731. Other objects (1990-019C-G) reportedly appeared in orbit following its deployment.

It was reported that USA-53 was an Advanced KH-11 photo-reconnaissance satellite, using an all-digital imaging system to return pictures. KH-11 satellites are believed to resemble the Hubble Space Telescope in size and shape, as the satellites were shipped in similar containers and had comparable primary mirror diameters.<ref "name=Hubble">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:PD-notice</ref> USA-53, nicknamed "Misty", was tracked briefly by amateur satellite observers in October and November 1990.<ref name="FAS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The mission marked another flight of an Template:Convert human skull, which served as the primary element of "Detailed Secondary Objective 469", also known as the "In-flight Radiation Dose Distribution Experiment" (IDRD). This joint NASA/DoD experiment was designed to examine the penetration of radiation into the human cranium during spaceflight. The female skull was seated in a plastic matrix, representative of tissue, and sliced into ten layers. Hundreds of thermo-luminescent dosimeters were mounted in the skull's layers to record radiation levels at multiple depths. This experiment, which also flew on STS-28 and STS-31, was located in the shuttle's mid-deck lockers on all three flights, recording radiation levels at different orbital inclinations.<ref name="macknight-1990">Template:Cite book</ref>

Atlantis landed at 18:08:44Template:NbspUTC (10:08:44Template:NbspamTemplate:NbspPST, local time at the landing site) on March 4, 1990, at Edwards Air Force Base, California, on runway 23 ending the STS-36. The orbiter's rollout distance was Template:Convert.<ref name="Dumoulin">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:PD-notice</ref> Atlantis was towed to the Mate-Demate Device by around 15:00 PST.

About 62 impacts in the shuttle's Thermal Protection System (TPS) tiles were counted by the debris team after the mission. Tile engineers reported that only one tile required replacement. The brakes and tires performed nominally. Drops of hydraulic fluid were observed in the right main landing gear wheel well, the liquid hydrogen Template:Convert disconnect cavity and possibly around two of the main engines.<ref name="sts36-analysis">Template:Cite tech report</ref><ref name="mser-sts36">Template:Cite tech report</ref>

Mission insigniaEdit

The thirty-six stars on the insignia symbolize the flight's numerical designation in the Space Transportation System's mission sequence; the stars also form part of a stylized American flag, forming the background to an image of a bald eagle, the American national bird.

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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