STS-112
| Canadarm2 takes the S1 truss out of the payload bay of Atlantis, prior to its installation on the ISS | |
| Names | Space Transportation System-112 | 
|---|---|
| Mission type | ISS assembly | 
| Operator | NASA | 
| COSPAR ID | 2002-047A | 
| SATCAT no. | 27537 | 
| Mission duration | 10 days, 19 hours, 58 minutes, 44 seconds | 
| Distance travelled | 7,200,000 kilometres (4,500,000 mi) | 
| Orbits completed | 170 | 
| Spacecraft properties | |
| Spacecraft | Space Shuttle Atlantis | 
| Launch mass | 116,538 kilograms (256,922 lb) | 
| Landing mass | 91,390 kilograms (201,480 lb) | 
| Payload mass | 12,572 kilograms (27,717 lb) | 
| Crew | |
| Crew size | 6 | 
| Members | |
| Start of mission | |
| Launch date | 7 October 2002, 19:45:51 UTC | 
| Launch site | Kennedy, LC-39B | 
| End of mission | |
| Landing date | 18 October 2002, 15:44:35 UTC | 
| Landing site | Kennedy, SLF Runway 33 | 
| Orbital parameters | |
| Reference system | Geocentric | 
| Regime | Low Earth | 
| Perigee altitude | 273 kilometres (170 mi) | 
| Apogee altitude | 405 kilometres (252 mi) | 
| Inclination | 51.6 degrees | 
| Period | 91.2 minutes | 
| Docking with ISS | |
| Docking port | PMA-2 (Destiny forward) | 
| Docking date | 9 October 2002, 15:16 UTC | 
| Undocking date | 16 October 2002, 13:13 UTC | 
| Time docked | 6 days, 21 hours, 57 minutes | 
| (L-R): Sandra H. Magnus, David A. Wolf, Pamela A. Melroy, Jeffrey S. Ashby, Piers J. Sellers and Fyodor Yurchikhin | |
STS-112 (ISS assembly flight 9A) was an 11-day Space Shuttle mission to the International Space Station (ISS) flown by Space Shuttle Atlantis. Space Shuttle Atlantis was launched on 7 October 2002 at 19:45 UTC from the Kennedy Space Center's launch pad 39B to deliver the 28,000 pound Starboard 1 (S1) truss segment to the Space Station. Ending a 4.5-million-mile journey, Atlantis landed at 15:44 UTC on 18 October 2002 on runway 33 at the Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility.
During the launch, the ET bipod ramp shed a chunk of foam that caused a dent ~4" wide and 3" deep into the metal SRB-ET Attach Ring near the bottom of the left Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster. Prior to the next mission (STS-113), an upper-level decision was made at NASA to continue with launches as scheduled. The launch subsequent to that was the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, the ill-fated STS-107.
Space Shuttle Atlantis had been scheduled to visit the International Space Station (ISS) again on the STS-114 mission in March 2003; however, due to the loss of Columbia, all Space Shuttles, including Atlantis, were temporarily grounded. Due to rescheduling of missions, Atlantis did not fly again until STS-115 on 9 September 2006.