Difference between revisions of "Long Duration Exposition Facility"

From OrbiterWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(New page: Deployed in orbit on April 7, 1984 by Shuttle Challenger and intended for retrieval after one year, the LDEF satellite was stranded in orbit for six years after the Challenger accident. Th...)
 
(Adds Pictures)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
[[Image:LDEF.jpg|200px|thumb|right|LDEF Grappled by Space Shuttle Atlantis]]
 
Deployed in orbit on April 7, 1984 by Shuttle Challenger and intended for retrieval after one year, the LDEF satellite was stranded in orbit for six years after the Challenger accident. The crew of STS-32 recovered the LDEF from its decaying orbit on January 11, 1990, two months before it would have re-entered the Earth's atmosphere and would have been destroyed.
 
Deployed in orbit on April 7, 1984 by Shuttle Challenger and intended for retrieval after one year, the LDEF satellite was stranded in orbit for six years after the Challenger accident. The crew of STS-32 recovered the LDEF from its decaying orbit on January 11, 1990, two months before it would have re-entered the Earth's atmosphere and would have been destroyed.
  
 
The LDEF makes a good object for deployment and retrieval missions in Orbiter.
 
The LDEF makes a good object for deployment and retrieval missions in Orbiter.

Revision as of 11:03, 10 April 2008

LDEF Grappled by Space Shuttle Atlantis

Deployed in orbit on April 7, 1984 by Shuttle Challenger and intended for retrieval after one year, the LDEF satellite was stranded in orbit for six years after the Challenger accident. The crew of STS-32 recovered the LDEF from its decaying orbit on January 11, 1990, two months before it would have re-entered the Earth's atmosphere and would have been destroyed.

The LDEF makes a good object for deployment and retrieval missions in Orbiter.