STS-32

E1010301

STS-32 was a NASA Space Shuttle mission flown by Columbia in January 1990 that deployed a communications satellite and retrieved the Long Duration Exposure Facility from orbit.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf NASA spaceflight
Space Shuttle mission
abbreviation STS-32 NERFINISHED
callsign Columbia NERFINISHED
commander Daniel C. Brandenstein NERFINISHED
country United States of America
surface form: United States
crewMember Bonnie J. Dunbar NERFINISHED
Daniel C. Brandenstein NERFINISHED
G. David Low NERFINISHED
James D. Wetherbee NERFINISHED
Marsha S. Ivins NERFINISHED
crewSize 5
deployed Leasat 5 NERFINISHED
Syncom IV-F5 NERFINISHED
landingDate 1990-01-20
landingRunway Runway 22
landingSite Edwards Air Force Base NERFINISHED
launchDate 1990-01-09
launchMass 117,700 kilograms
launchSite Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39A
launchVehicle Space Shuttle Columbia NERFINISHED
missionDuration 10 days 0 hours 38 minutes
missionNumber 32
missionObjective Conduct materials science experiments
Conduct microgravity experiments
Deploy Syncom IV-F5 communications satellite
Retrieve Long Duration Exposure Facility NERFINISHED
missionPatchShape circular
missionSpecialist Bonnie J. Dunbar NERFINISHED
G. David Low NERFINISHED
Marsha S. Ivins NERFINISHED
nextMission STS-31 NERFINISHED
operator NASA
orbitApogee 301 kilometers
orbitInclination 28.45 degrees
orbitPerigee 296 kilometers
orbitPeriod 90.4 minutes
pilot James D. Wetherbee NERFINISHED
previousMission STS-33 NERFINISHED
primaryPayload Long Duration Exposure Facility NERFINISHED
Syncom IV-F5 NERFINISHED
program NASA Space Shuttle program
surface form: Space Shuttle program
recoveredPayload Long Duration Exposure Facility NERFINISHED
retrieved Long Duration Exposure Facility NERFINISHED
spaceAgency NASA
spacecraft OV-102 NERFINISHED
Space Shuttle Columbia NERFINISHED
yearOfFlight 1990

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

STS-36 precededBy STS-32