STS-44


STS-44 was a Space Shuttle mission using Atlantis that launched on 24 November 1991. It was a U.S. Department of Defense space mission.

Crew

Backup crew

Crew seating arrangements

Mission highlights

The launch was on 24 November 1991 at 23:44:00 UTC. A launch set for 19 November was delayed due to replacement and testing of a malfunctioning redundant inertial measurement unit on the Inertial Upper Stage booster attached to the Defense Support Program satellite. The launch was reset for 24 November and was delayed by 13 minutes to allow an orbiting spacecraft to pass and to allow external tank liquid oxygen replenishment after minor repairs to a valve in the liquid oxygen replenishment system in the mobile launcher platform. Launch weight was.
The mission was dedicated to the Department of Defense. The unclassified payload included a Defense Support Program satellite and attached Inertial Upper Stage, deployed on flight day one. Cargo bay and middeck payloads included the Interim Operational Contamination Monitor, Terra Scout, Military Man in Space, Air Force Maui Optical System, Cosmic Radiation Effects and Activation Monitor, Shuttle Activation Monitor, Radiation Monitoring Equipment III, Visual Function Tester-1, Ultraviolet Plume Instrument, Bioreactor Flow, Particle Trajectory experiment, and Extended Duration Orbiter Medical Project, a series of investigations in support of Extended Duration Orbiter.
The landing was on 1 December 1991 at 22:34:44 UTC, Runway 5, Edwards Air Force Base, California. The rollout distance was, and the rollout time was 107 seconds. The landing weight was. The landing was originally scheduled for Kennedy Space Center on 4 December, but the ten-day mission was shortened and the landing rescheduled following the 30 November on-orbit failure of one of three orbiter inertial measurement units. The lengthy rollout was due to minimal braking for test. Atlantis returned to Kennedy on 8 December. This was also the final shuttle landing on a dry lake bed runway.

Wake-up calls

NASA began its longstanding tradition of waking up astronauts with music during Apollo 15. Each track is specially chosen, often by the astronauts' families, and usually has a special meaning to an individual member of the crew, or is applicable to their daily activities.
DaySongArtistPlayed/For
Day 2Recorded message from Patrick StewartMario Runco
Day 3This is the Army, Mr JonesIrving Berlin
Day 4It's Time to Love James Brown
Day 5Cheesburger in ParadiseJimmy Buffett
Day 6Twist and Shout from Ferris Bueller's Day Off
Day 7University of Alabama and Auburn University fight songsJim Voss and Jan Davis
Day 8In the Mood