Extended Duration Orbiter


The Extended Duration Orbiter program was a project by NASA to prepare for long-term microgravity research aboard Space Station Freedom, which later evolved into the International Space Station. Scientists and NASA needed practical experience in managing progressively longer times for their experiments. The original Space Shuttle configuration usually provided a week to ten days of spaceflight. Several research projects and hardware components were part of the project, of which the EDO-pallet was one of the most visible, contracted by Rockwell International.
The first orbiter outfitted with the EDO hardware configuration was Endeavour, during its construction, and its last EDO flight was STS-67, in 1995. Endeavour's EDO modifications were removed in 1996 as part of routine maintenance, to reduce the orbiter's weight prior to STS-89. Columbia was outfitted for EDO flight during its maintenance period from August 10, 1991, through February 9, 1992, prior to STS-50, which was the first EDO flight. From 1992, through 1994, Atlantis went through a maintenance period, during which Atlantis was modified to have the provisions needed for EDO capability, but NASA chose not to proceed with the final modifications, and Atlantis does not have EDO capability. The EDO-pallet used in these orbiter configurations was destroyed in the Columbia accident.

EDO Pallet

The Extended Duration Orbiter Cryogenic kit was a equipment assembly which attached vertically to the payload bay rear bulkhead of an orbiter, and allowed the orbiter to support a flight of up to 16 days duration. The equipment included cryogenic tanks, associated control panels, and avionics equipment. Although Atlantis was partially upgraded to accommodate the EDO, only Columbia and Endeavour actually flew with the pallet. The pallet made its debut on STS-50, and was lost on STS-107.
Initially, NASA considered adding a second EDO pallet to Endeavour, placed in front of the first, for a total of thirteen tank sets, that would have allowed an orbiter to remain in space for 28 days, but managers decided against it when the International Space Station assembly began, and instead removed the EDO capability from the orbiter, to reduce its weight and allow it to carry more cargo to the ISS.
No replacement for the pallet was planned, since the Station-to-Shuttle Power Transfer System provided much of the same abilities, and the 2011 retirement of the shuttle fleet made it redundant.

Specifications

The EDO tanks stored 368 pounds of liquid hydrogen at -418 degrees Fahrenheit, and 3,124 pounds of liquid oxygen at -285 degrees Fahrenheit. Total empty weight of the system was 3,571 pounds. When filled with cryogens, the system weight was approximately 7,000 pounds.

Use

and hydrogen were supplied to the orbiter's three electrical power generating fuel cells, where they were converted into sufficient electrical energy to support the average 4 family-member house for approximately 6 months. About 3,000 pounds of pure drinking water was also produced by the fuel cells.
Missions with the EDO pallet conducted research on microgravity, Life Sciences, Earth and celestial observations, and human adaptation to the low gravity environment.
The following missions used the EDO pallet:
EDO FlightShuttleMissionLaunch DateDurationPrimary Payload
1ColumbiaSTS-50June 25, 199213 days, 19 hours, 30 minutes, 4 secondsUnited States Microgravity Laboratory-1
2ColumbiaSTS-58October 18, 199314 days, 0 hours, 12 minutes, 32 secondsSpacelab Life Sciences-2
3ColumbiaSTS-62March 4, 199413 days, 23 hours, 16 minutes, 41 secondsUnited States Microgravity Payload-2
4ColumbiaSTS-65July 8, 199414 days, 17 hours, 55 minutes, 1 secondInternational Microgravity Laboratory-2
5EndeavourSTS-67March 2, 199516 days, 15 hours, 8 minutes, 48 secondsASTRO-2
6ColumbiaSTS-73October 20, 199515 days, 21 hours, 53 minutes, 16 secondsUnited States Microgravity Laboratory-2
7ColumbiaSTS-75February 22, 199615 days, 17 hours, 40 minutes, 22 secondsTethered Satellite System-1R
United States Microgravity Payload-3
8ColumbiaSTS-78June 20, 199616 days, 21 hours, 48 minutes, 30 secondsLife and Microgravity Spacelab
9ColumbiaSTS-80November 19, 199617 days, 15 hours, 53 minutes, 18 secondsWake Shield Facility
ORFEUS-SPAS II
10ColumbiaSTS-83April 4, 19973 days, 23 hours, 13 minutes, 38 secondsMicrogravity Science Laboratory-1
11ColumbiaSTS-94July 1, 199715 days, 16 hours, 45 minutes, 29 secondsMicrogravity Science Laboratory-1
12ColumbiaSTS-87November 19, 199715 days, 16 hours, 35 minutes, 1 secondUnited States Microgravity Payload-4
SPARTAN-201
13ColumbiaSTS-90April 17, 199815 days, 21 hours, 50 minutes, 58 secondsNeurolab
14ColumbiaSTS-107January 16, 200315 days, 22 hours, 20 minutes, 32 secondsSPACEHAB Research Double Module
FREESTAR, Lost in Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster

EDO medical project

Prior to the EDO project, no shuttle had flown a mission longer than 10 days. Since space travelers may faint when they stand up after returning to normal gravity even after short flights, and muscle strength may be reduced, the EDOMP project focused on ensuring that the crew could land the orbiter, and exit from it without help after a 16-day flight. Astronauts on 40 shuttle flights participated in 36 EDOMP investigations. The results of these investigations were used to make rules and recommendations for 16-day flights. Several types of exercise devices were among the devices and procedures developed to prevent the de-conditioning of the body that occurs during space flight. The crew transport vehicles, in which astronauts are now transported after landing, were built to enhance medical capabilities at the landing site, as well as crew comfort and safety. A database of 125 formal publications, and 299 abstracts, technical papers, and presentations, also resulted from the EDOMP. The project saw its successor in the ISS Medical Project.

Other EDO projects and studies