STS-27

E239860

STS-27 was a 1988 NASA Space Shuttle Atlantis mission primarily dedicated to a classified Department of Defense payload.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
STS-27 canonical 3

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf NASA spaceflight
Space Shuttle mission
classified Department of Defense mission
callsign Atlantis
classifiedBy Department of Defense
surface form: United States Department of Defense
commander Robert L. Gibson NERFINISHED
country United States of America
surface form: United States
crewMember Guy S. Gardner
Jerry L. Ross
Richard M. Mullane
Robert L. Gibson NERFINISHED
William M. Shepherd NERFINISHED
crewSize 5
crewSurvived true
damageEvent severe thermal protection system damage
followedBy STS-29
heatShieldIssue loss and damage of many thermal protection tiles
inclination 57.0 degrees
landingDate 1988-12-06
landingMass ~86,000 kg
landingRunway Edwards AFB Runway 17
landingSite Edwards Air Force Base
launchDate 1988-12-02
launchMass ~116,000 kg
launchSite Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39B
launchVehicle Space Shuttle Atlantis
missionDuration 4 days
4 days 9 minutes
missionPatchFeature American bald eagle
Department of Defense symbolism
missionSpecialist Jerry L. Ross
Richard M. Mullane
William M. Shepherd NERFINISHED
missionType Department of Defense payload deployment
NASAProgram Space Transportation System
notableFor extensive damage to Atlantis heat shield tiles
operator NASA
orbit low Earth orbit
surface form: Low Earth orbit
orbiter Atlantis
orbitsCompleted 68
payload classified Department of Defense satellite
pilot Guy S. Gardner
precededBy STS-26
riskAssessment post-flight determined to have been close to loss of orbiter
spacecraft Space Shuttle Atlantis
spaceShuttleProgram NASA Space Shuttle program
surface form: Space Shuttle program
year 1988

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

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

STS-26 followedBy STS-27
OV-104 performedMission STS-27
Jerry L. Ross spaceMission STS-27