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STS-1

OV-102 (Columbia)
April 12-14, 1981

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Young in-flight activities
"The only bad thing is we're going to have to come down."
- John Young

Neither Young nor Crippen experienced motion sickness during the flight.

"Young is what the pilots call a 'leadhead.' A leadhead is a guy who can't get sick no matter what you do to him."
- Dr. Gerald Soffen, Miami Herald, 7-18-82
Young in-flight activities

Med   Lg
Young in-flight activities

Young in-flight activities
Young in-flight activities

Altitude: 166 nm
Inclination: 40.3 degrees
Number of orbits: 36
Duration: 54 hours, 20 minutes, 53 seconds
Distance: 1,074,567 miles
Weight at launch: 219,258
Weight at landing: 195,472
Hawaii as viewed from STS-1
Hawaii

Himalayas as viewed from STS-1
Himalayas
Naples as viewed from STS-1
Naples

To conserve fuel, Columbia was placed into gravity gradient attitude. A maneuver first developed during the Gemini program, the spaceship is placed in a nosedown position, perpendicular to the surface of the earth. Stability is achieved because the gravitational forces of the Earth are stronger on the part of the ship nearest the planet; these forces, in time, overcome the inertial forces acting on the ship as a whole. Without this maneuver, thrusters would have to be used to keep the ship stable.

Massachusetts as viewed from STS-1
Massachusetts
The Bahamas as viewed from STS-1
Bahamas


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