Welcome
| History | Science
| Spacecraft | People
| References | Multimedia
| Home | Search
| Tours | Site
Map
History
Shuttle-Mir Background - Mission Control Center - Moscow
During Shuttle-Mir, the Russian Space Agency (RSA) had three control rooms
in a single complex in Kaliningrad. MCC-M could process data from up to ten
spacecraft, although each control room was dedicated to a single program: one
to Mir; one to Soyuz; and one to the Russian "space shuttle," Buran.
Flight control people were organized into teams, similar to NASA's system
at MCC-Houston:
- The Flight Director provided
policy guidance and communicated with the mission management team.
- The Flight Shift Director
was responsible for real-time decisions, within a set of flight rules.
- The Mission Deputy Shift
Manager (MDSM) for the MCC was responsible for the control room's consoles,
computers and peripherals.
- The MDSM for Ground Control
was responsible for communications.
- The MDSM for Crew Training
was similar to NASA's "cap com," or capsule communicator. This person generally
had served as the Mir crew's lead trainer.
Related
Links:
Operations
Continue
Long Tour
Tours
| Timeline | Shuttle-Mir
Background | Shuttle Flights & Mir Increments
| Mir Expeditions
Graphic
version available
This
page is best viewed with Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 or higher or Netscape
4.0 or higher.
Other viewing suggestions.
NASA Web Policy
Curator:
Kim Dismukes
Responsible NASA Official: John Ira Petty