Fincke reaches ISS for third time
Staff Reporter
  
  GUWAHATI,
 May 21 – NASA astronaut Edward Michael Fincke, popularly known as Mike 
Fincke and who is affectionately called Mike Mama by the students of 
Assam, has again reached the International Space Station (ISS) as one of
 the crew members of the NASA space shuttle Endeavour. The space shuttle
 was launched successfully from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida 
on May 16. This mission of the Endeavour is named – STS-134. Mike
 is on his third sojourn to the ISS. He has so far spent a year’s time 
in the space on board the ISS, getting there twice and returning 
subsequently traveling by Russian rockets. But this time, the Endeavour 
flight will be his first on the space shuttle.“It
 was an unbelievable, unforgettable experience that we will preserve for
 the rest of our lives. We all had tears in our eyes when it really took
 off with the booming sound shaking the ground around us. We were so 
proud and thankful to God for such a swift lift- off with one of our own
 family members in that precious shuttle,” said Probha Saikia, 
mother-in-law of Mike, who along with her husband Rupesh Saikia and 
Mike’s wife Renita Saikia and their three children were present at the 
Florida Space Center during the launch.The
 launch was originally scheduled on April 29 last. But it was postponed 
because of a problem associated with the Auxiliary Power Unit (APU)-1 
heaters of the space shuttle. President Barack Obama and the First Lady 
were present at the launch site on April 29 to witness the launch. Later
 the President met all the crew members of STS-134.The
 space shuttle launched on May 16 took about eight minutes to reach its 
orbit and docked with the ISS on May18, said Probha Saikia. The
 Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS) was installed successfully on May 
19 on the outside of the ISS’s right side – on the starboard side of the
 station’s truss. With a price tag of $2 billion, AMS is the most 
expensive piece of equipment a space shuttle has ever carried. The
 spectrometer is designed to capture space particles like anti-matter 
and dark matter, about which scientists know little. It could lead to a 
better understanding of the origin and evolution of the universe. Armed 
with that information, hundreds of scientists from 16 countries are 
hoping to determine what composes the universe and how it began, as the 
AMS searches for clues on the origin of dark matter and the existence of
 anti-matter and other unusual matters. AMS also could provide 
information about pulsars, blazers, gamma ray bursts and any number of 
other cosmic phenomena, said a NASA publication.

(The Assam Tribune, 22.05.2011)
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