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sts103.html
STS-103


December 19 - 27, 1999
Discovery


The crew

(From left) Michael Foale, Claude Nicollier, Plt. Scott Kelly, Cdr. Curtis Brown, Jean-François Clervoy, John Grunsfeld, Steven Smith.


The Artwork

(August 1999) Designed by the crewmembers, the STS-103 emblem depicts the Space Shuttle Discovery approaching the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) prior to its capture and berthing. The purpose of the mission is to remove and replace some of the Telescope's older and out-of-date systems with newer, more reliable and more capable ones, and to make repairs to HST's exterior thermal insulation that has been damaged by more than nine years of exposure to the space environment. The horizontal and vertical lines centered on the Telescope symbolize the ability to reach and maintain a desired attitude in space, essential to the instrument's scientific operation. The preservation of this ability is one of the primary objectives of the mission. After the flight, the Telescope will resume its successful exploration of deep space and will continue to be used to study solar system objects, stars in the making, late phases of stellar evolution, galaxies and the early history of the universe. HST, as represented on this emblem was inspired by views from previous servicing missions, with its solar arrays illuminated by the Sun, providing a striking contrast with the blackness of space and the night side of Earth.

Claude Nicollier designed the 103 patch. He was careful to pick colors that showed how beautiful Hubble looks out in space.