Shuttle Atlantis glides home
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla.–The shuttle Atlantis dropped out of a crystal clear Florida sky and glided to a “picture-perfect” landing at the Kennedy Space Center Friday to close out a successful 11-day space station mission, bringing astronaut Nicole Stott back to Earth after 91 days in space.
Landing
With commander Charles Hobaugh at the controls, Atlantis executed a sweeping right overhead turn to line up on runway 33, pilot Barry Wilmore deployed the ship's landing gear and the shuttle settled to a tire-smoking touchdown at 9:44:23 a.m. EST.
“Houston, Atlantis, wheels stopped,” Hobaugh radioed as the orbiter rolled to a halt on the runway center line. “Roger, wheels stopped, Atlantis, that was a picture-perfect end to a top-fuel mission to the space station,” replied astronaut Chris Ferguson from mission control at the Johnson Space Center. “Everybody, welcome back to Earth, especially you, Nicole.”
Hobaugh, Wilmore, flight engineer Leland Melvin, and spacewalkers Robert Satcher, Michael Foreman, and Randolph Bresnik doffed their pressure suits for a traditional runway inspection about an hour and a half after touchdown.
“We really had truly an amazing mission,” Hobaugh said on the runway. “It was not us, it was not any single group, but it was just an incredible team from all around the nation.
“We were lucky, I mean, part of it's luck and part of it's just pure, great skill, workmanship in processing Atlantis, getting it ready for us. We had no hitches, we went off on time, we landed on time. … Nicole came back with us, she's doing great, she's headed back to see her family.”1)



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