STS-123
Greg Johnson set for Tuesday shuttle launch
Sunday, March 09, 2008 Categories: Space
Air Force Col.
Greg Johnson,
a
1980 Park Hills High School
graduate,
is set to blast off from Kennedy Space Center in
Florida on Tuesday, March 11, aboard Space
shuttle Endeavour. The STS-123 mission is
officially set for launch after getting the "go"
from NASA's Mission Management Team on Sunday.
Liftoff is scheduled for 2:28 a.m. EDT.
The current weather forecast calls for only a 10 percent chance atmospheric conditions will delay the launch, with the primary concern coming from a slight chance of a low cloud ceiling around Kennedy, according to NASA.
As pilot, Johnson will add the space shuttle to the more than 40 different aircraft he's flown. U.S. Navy Capt. Dominic Gorie will command the shuttle. The crew also includes Mission Specialists Rick Linnehan, Robert L. Behnken, Mike Foreman, Garrett Reisman and Japanese astronaut Takao Doi.
The crew will deliver the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo Logistics Module and the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre robotics system to the International Space Station.
The mission was scheduled for launch in February, but problems that delayed the preceding mission pushed it back.
The current weather forecast calls for only a 10 percent chance atmospheric conditions will delay the launch, with the primary concern coming from a slight chance of a low cloud ceiling around Kennedy, according to NASA.
As pilot, Johnson will add the space shuttle to the more than 40 different aircraft he's flown. U.S. Navy Capt. Dominic Gorie will command the shuttle. The crew also includes Mission Specialists Rick Linnehan, Robert L. Behnken, Mike Foreman, Garrett Reisman and Japanese astronaut Takao Doi.
The crew will deliver the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo Logistics Module and the Canadian Space Agency's Dextre robotics system to the International Space Station.
The mission was scheduled for launch in February, but problems that delayed the preceding mission pushed it back.
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Greg Johnson: Astronaut's long wait gets longer
Friday, January 04, 2008 Categories: Space
But a problem with the fuel sensor system on Space Shuttle Atlantis has delayed the STS-122 mission, and this has forced NASA to review its shuttle launch schedule, including Johnson’s flight. Atlantis was set to lift off in early December. Difficulty in troubleshooting the fuel sensor system has forced several delays, most recently a Jan. 10 launch date. On Thursday, NASA managers said the earliest Atlantis can fly is Jan. 24, and a February launch date is more likely.
Atlantis is to carry the European Space Agency’s Columbus Laboratory to the space station. Its flight may have to wait until after a Russian cargo rocket docks at the station on Feb. 9. Its launch is scheduled for Feb. 7.
NASA says it won’t announce dates for any subsequent shuttle flights until it’s set a firm launch date for Atlantis. But it takes several weeks after one shuttle mission to get ready for the next, so Johnson isn't likely to fly before March.
Even as he awaits his first space shuttle flight, Johnson has been working on the spaceship that’s to replace the space shuttle. In 2005, NASA appointed Johnson as a crew representative supporting the design and testing of the Constellation System’s Orion crew vehicle.