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Home > Space Pin Badges > U.S. Programs & Missions > Space Shuttle Missions (1-50)
048- NASA Space Shuttle Mission STS-50 Lapel Pin
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£4.25

STS-50 Lapel Pin

Mission: USML-1
Space Shuttle: Columbia
Launch Pad: 39A
Launch Weight: 257,265 pounds
Launched: June 25, 1992, 12:12:23 p.m. EDT
Landing Site: Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Landing: July 9, 1992, 7:43 a.m. EDT
Landing Weight: 228,127 pounds
Runway: 33
Rollout Distance: 10,200 feet
Rollout Time: 59 seconds
Revolution: 221
Mission Duration: 13 days, 19 hours, 30 minutes, 04 seconds
Orbit Altitude: 160 nautical miles
Orbit Inclination: 28.45 degrees
Miles Traveled: 5.8 million

Crew Members

                    STS-50 Crew Photo

Image above: STS-50 Crew photo with Commander Richard N. Richards, Pilot Kenneth D. Bowersox, Mission Specialists Bonnie J. Dunbar, Ellen S. Baker, Carl J. Meade and Payload Specialists Lawrence J. DeLucas and Eugene H. Trinh. Image Credit: NASA

Mission Highlights

STS-50 Mission Patch The primary payload was the United States Microgravity Laboratory-I (USML-1), a manned Spacelab module with a connecting tunnel to the orbiter crew compartment. USML-1 was a national effort to advance microgravity research in a broad number of disciplines. The 13 day mission, the first Extended Duration Orbiter flight and the longest space shuttle mission to date, also provided new information on the effects of long-term human stay in space. Experiments conducted were: Crystal Growth Furnace (CGF), Drop Physics Module (DPM), Surface Tension Driven Convection Experiment (STDCE), Zeolite Crystal Growth (ZCG), Protein Crystal Growth (PCG), Glovebox Facility (GBX), Space Acceleration Measurement System (SAMS), Generic Bioprocessing Apparatus (GBA), Astroculture-1 (ASC), Extended Duration Orbiter Medical Project (EDOMP), and Solid Surface Combustion Experiment (SSCE).

Secondary experiments included Investigation in Polymer Membrane Processing (IPMP), Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment II (SAREX-II), and Ultraviolet Plume Instrument (UVPI).

NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center