ESA    Life in Space    Expanding Frontiers    Improving Daily Life    Protecting the Environment    Benefits for Europe  
   
Media Centre
Press ReleasesESA TelevisionLaunch Media CornerExhibitions
Services
CalendarPublicationsFrequently asked questionsESA-sponsored ConferencesHelpSite CreditsPortal terms of useCommentsSubscribe
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
 
printer friendly page
The STS-134 crew during simulated launch countdown exercise
Roberto Vittori
Roberto Vittori’s DAMA mission to Space Station
 
11 April 2011
ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori is set to fly on the next Space Shuttle mission in late April to deliver the large Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer science payload to the International Space Station. Dedicated web pages have been launched today to spotlight Roberto’s ‘DAMA’ mission.
 
Roberto is a Mission Specialist on the six-astronaut team flying on the final voyage of Space Shuttle Endeavour. STS-134 is the spaceplane’s penultimate mission, and Roberto will be the last European – and last non-American – to fly on this venerable vehicle.

The launch of Endeavour is planned for 29 April.

The mission will make some of the last deliveries to the Station. The AMS-02 alpha magnetic spectrometer is a state-of-the-art cosmic-ray detector designed to examine fundamental aspects of matter and the origin of the Universe.  
 
Roberto Vittori and Andrew Feustel
Roberto and Andrew Feustel in simulator training
AMS-02 will not only be the largest and most complex scientific instrument to be installed on the Station, but it is also the largest international collaboration on a single experiment in space.

Endeavour will also deliver the third Express Logistics Carrier, which holds a pair of communication antennas, a high-pressure oxygen tank, an extra ammonia coolant reservoir and a new piece for the two-armed Dextre robot.

Four spacewalks will put everything in place in the last sorties of the Shuttle era.

Listen to Roberto about his functions during the mission:
 
 
Space shuttle Endeavour
Endeavour waiting for launch
Roberto will lift AMS-02 with the Shuttle robotic arm from the payload bay and berth it on the Station for final installation. He will also meet his ESA colleague Paolo Nespoli, who is already aboard on his long MagISStra mission.

Listen to Roberto about the robotic arm operations:

In total, 12 astronauts will share ten hectic days on the Station packed with scientific and logistics activities.

The DAMA mission sets a new European record: Roberto is the first ESA astronaut to fly to the Station for the third time in his space career.

Read more about Roberto, his mission and the 14-day STS-134 flight on www.esa.int/dama
 
 

 
 
DAMA Mission
Related articles
Papal call to the Space StationAMS: ready to discover the particle universeEndeavour docks with Space StationLast Shuttle with ESA astronaut lifts off to Space Station to hunt ‘dark matter’
Related links
Information for mediaSTS-134 mission (NASA)
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2011 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.