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Discovery rolls out

Discovery travels from the Vehicle Assembly Building to pad 39A in preparation for the STS-124 mission.

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STS-124: The programs

In advance of shuttle Discovery's STS-124 mission to the station, managers from both programs discuss the flight.

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STS-124: The mission

A detailed preview of Discovery's mission to deliver Japan's science laboratory Kibo to the station is provided in this briefing.

 Part 1 | Part 2

STS-124: Spacewalks

Three spacewalks are planned during Discovery's STS-124 assembly mission to the station.

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STS-124: The Crew

The Discovery astronauts, led by commander Mark Kelly, meet the press in the traditional pre-flight news conference.

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Complex 40 toppling

The Complex 40 mobile service tower at Cape Canaveral's former Titan rocket launch pad was toppled using explosives on April 27.

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Test for commercial space habitat reaches milestone
BIGELOW AEROSPACE NEWS RELEASE
Posted: May 10, 2008

LAS VEGAS, NV - Genesis I, the first test module launched by commercial space habitat developer Bigelow Aerospace, has completed its 10,000th orbit around the Earth. The unmanned module is about to start its third year in space since it ushered in a new era of private space development following its July 12, 2006 launch.

Since it was lifted into orbit, Genesis I has continued to perform its main mission to test and verify systems to be used in future manned space habitats. A one-third scale model of the future BA 330 space complex modules, Genesis I performed the first successful test of expandable space habitat technology in orbit.

In its 660 days in orbit, Genesis I has traveled the equivalent of more than 270 million miles, which would take it to the Moon and back 1,154 times.

During its perpetual trip around the Earth, Genesis I has seen every corner of the globe. The spacecraft's on-board camera system has recorded approximately 14,000 images including images of all seven continents.

While people back on Earth take care to turn off the light when they leave a room, the lights have stayed on inside Genesis I. Electrical equipment on board have been churning away for 15,840 consecutive hours.

Bigelow Aerospace, based in Las Vegas, followed up Genesis I by launching sister spacecraft Genesis II on June 28, 2007, and is currently at work on Sundancer, its first module designed to support a human crew.

About Bigelow Aerospace:

The mission of Bigelow Aerospace is to open the frontier of space to all of humanity by dramatically reducing the cost of conducting human spaceflight activities. To this end, Bigelow Aerospace is developing orbital complexes utilizing innovative expandable space habitat technology. The Las Vegas-based firm's affordable and flexible space complex architecture can be adapted for virtually any crewed or autonomous mission requiring a large pressurized volume.