 Sonlia, we're 1 plus 30 from the ZOE. Back with you at 0641, no response required. We're with you on the mid-deck, Franklin. You look real busy. And, Franklin, we'd like for you to tilt the near field module toward you so that the thermo-phoretic probe is, Fox, is resting on the floor of the glove box. Are you hearing me with this mic? Yeah, thanks Jeff, that one's a lot better. Here's the first of the samples which we just built. And the spare parts box you gave us, I think will work very well. And copy that, Jeff, looks great. Go ahead, Columbia. Just terminate for a second. Mid-deck downlink, I will show you the front view camera. Copy. Copy, Maurizio. We got that on the downlink, and it looks great. Columbia, Houston, we're back with live TV on the mid-deck. OK, Bill. Thank you, this is Mark Carrot with the Houston Chronicle for Franklin Chang Diaz. Could you kind of summarize what you think the pace and success of this flight has been since the TSS operations? What do you see going on that you think will point to the success of this flight? The TSS operations, the flight has been nothing, but good things coming out in many of the experiments that we are conducting. We are doing a lot of exciting microgravity experiments in the payload bay as well as combustion in the openers mid-deck. And maybe you've gotten the chance to see a lot of the downlink that has come down to the ground as a result of those experiments. And they've all been working very, very well. The mid-deck load box has performed very, very well. And we continue to use it, and we expect to be using it even more during the excitation day. So everything is looking real good. OK, Steven? Steven Young with Astronomy Now, a question for Jeff Hoffman. Historically, some of the greatest breakthroughs in science have been following accidents or setbacks of some kind that as a result of those problems, a great discovery has come along. Do you see the TSS breakaway in many ways in that same light? We've been getting little bits and pieces of messages from the science team on the ground describing some of the work that they're doing. Clearly, this was not the mission that they expected. Although I will say that what we were looking for, and that is characterization of electrodynamic detectors and the generation of power, looking at the capability of electron beams and how much current can be collected by a satellite in the Earth's planet, I think that those data, and it looks very exciting. And we've got a lot of other data that really we've only seen bits and pieces. So we've got our fingers crossed that scientists are going to make a lot of this mission. And I think a few months from now at the International Tether Conference, when these results are presented, it should be pretty exciting. Hey, we've got a lot of clear story. And as far as our TSS sighting, when it was basically nil, the moon was very bright. Right about the spot where we spot the TSS in my tummy. Probably got the moon away from it. We were too much into the daylight to be able to see anything. We had one thing glimpsed, something we thought might have been it, but nothing miscended it. Yeah, thanks very much for trying. You sure do have a bright moon there. But it's probably enhancing your view of Earth at night. That's a beautiful view of Earth, especially on the oceans and on the clouds. Yes, sir. Moonlight Earth is gorgeous. You all right, Columbia? I just picked up a visual on the satellite. We have it there. I'll try to tell you what we see out the window right now. We've got the cameras on us. It's the moonlight. Looks like it's lighting up the tether and looking out the overhead window. And the tether hanging down. It looks like the entire tether is illuminated. And I don't really know if you see any downlink. We have the downlink, and we have the tether. In the upper left-hand corner there. State is now. Yeah. So it seems from here. Yes, sir. We have it. Great picture. Great effort. Thanks. We'll be handing over here in about 45 seconds.