Shuttle Launch: It’s On Again!

After a two week delay to fix the faulty auxiliary power unit that caused the STS-134 May-3rd launch to be scrubbed, NASA is ready for another launch attempt. You can watch the whole thing on NASA’s fabulous “NASA Live TV” service (full live coverage usually starts a few hours before the planned launch time). I’m showing this on my big screen at Ivan’s SkyRocket Cafe, so don’t miss it. You can have a nice bowl of “Mir-Cat Stew” while you watch.

Launch is scheduled for 8.56am US Eastern time on Monday May 16th.

This is NASA’s official countdown clock… the CDT time shows the “Count Down Time”, a negative number before launch, and a positive number after launch (then being the Elapsed Mission Time).

 

 


Mission Data

Mission: STS-134
Space Shuttle: Endeavour
Primary Payload: Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and ELC-3
Launch Date: May 16th
Launch Time: 8.56 a.m. EDT
Launch Pad: 39A
Landing:
Landing Time:
Landing Site: Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
Mission Duration: 14 days



You can view live coverage of the mission from NASA’s Live TV stream, which you can watch here at Junior Flyer: Ivan’s SkyRocket Cafe – NASA Live TV

Or, visit NASA’s Shuttle website for full and detailed mission information.

Note: There are several planned “holds” in the countdown, where the countdown is paused. For example, there is a planned hold at T-3 hours, of approximately 2 and a half hours duration. Then the countdown continues. For a detailed list of the planned countdown holds, and why they occur, see the Countdown 101 description from the NASA website.

The launch time of 8.56am EDT is the local time at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, which is 4 hours behind UTC (Universal Coordinated Time, or GMT Greenwich Mean Time). What that means in English is the launch is scheduled for 136:12:56:00 UTC, where the 136 represents day 136 of the year.

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Author: Ivan Astybuttich

Ex-cosmonaut Ivan Astybuttich has retired from the Russian space program and now pursues his other love, managing the SkyRocket Cafe. Having been presumed missing in space, this "lost cosmonaut" actually landed near our airport and, seeing the tremendous business opportunity presented, established his cafe. Ivan's SkyRocket Cafe specializes in space-themed food and has a range of space memorabilia and videos on display.

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