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BEIJING, June 24 (Xinhuanet) -- NASA is taking bigger chances and more of them to keep the international space station running with a two-man crew and no shuttle visits.
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| A NASA illustration shows the work site on
the ISS with spacewalkers Commander Gennady Padalka and Science Officer
Mike Fincke. (China Daily/NASA) |
On Thursday night, both astronauts will take a
riskier than usual spacewalk, wearing an odd mishmash of Russian and U.S. gear,
cut off at times from communications, and struggling with tools in extra-stiff
gloves never intended for the repairs they will make, according to Thursday's
China Daily.
They'll be forced to alternately speak Russian and
English and communicate with two different control centers. They'll travel an
unprecedented distance over dangerous terrain, about 45 minutes each way.
Why? Because there's been no space shuttle to bring
them the equipment they need. Russian spacecraft are too small to carry large
replacement parts.
Despite the added risks, astronaut Mike Fincke and
cosmonaut Gennady Padalka said Wednesday they're excited and ready.
"We're all in this together," Fincke told Mission
Control. "This is going to be fun."
Their task will be replacing a fizzled circuit
breaker.
When the space shuttles were flying, managers never
would have considered a spacewalk requiring occasional hand signals and
jury-rigged suits. But last year's Columbia disaster changed everything.
The Russians have been bailing out NASA with crew and
supply drop-offs ever since the shuttle accident, and are demanding compensation
for Thursday's six-hour spacewalk since it involves repairs to the U.S. section.
They warned to postpone the outing, but agreed Tuesday to worry about payment
later.
The trouble in orbit began in April, just hours after
Fincke and Padalka arrived at the space station for a six-month stay.
A critical circuit board failed, cutting power to a
gyroscope, or spinning wheel. The breakdown left the station with just two
functioning gyroscopes, the bare minimum needed to keep the complex stable and
pointed in the right direction.
Then last month, Padalka could not get the
water-cooling system of his U.S. spacesuit to work. The only option was to send
Padalka and Fincke out in Russian spacesuits from the Russian side of the
station, more than doubling their travel distance over a landscape of protruding
metal parts.
The spacemen added American helmet lights and
handcuff checklists to the brand new Russian suits, for extra safety.
Station operations manager Mike Suffredini said
safety officials were in on the debate and stressed that this spacewalk "is one
that we can go do and should go do." To put it off could jeopardize two
spacewalks planned by the Russians later this summer for assembly chores, he
said.
Safety questions
But a retired agent in NASA's inspector general
office, Joseph Gutheinz, wonders whether NASA and the Russian Space Agency are
"sweeping any known risks under the table in an effort to keep the space station
program alive." He said the agencies downplayed risks at Russia's Mir station
during visits by U.S. astronauts in the 1990s.
Gutheinz also questions whether it's safe to send an
entire crew out, with no one to monitor systems inside. The station has been
empty during a spacewalk only once before, in February.
Although the station's U.S. pressure chamber was
designed to accommodate Russian spacesuits, the parts needed for that are on the
ground. So Fincke and Padalka will have to leave from the Russian hatch and
travel between 80 feet and 100 feet to the repair site, using a 50-foot crane to
swing themselves partway.
Exiting from the U.S. hatch would have put them 30
feet from the fried circuit breaker.
Because Fincke and Padalka will venture so far from
the Russian antenna, they expect communication blackouts, not only with flight
controllers but with each other. To get messages across, they've come up with
hand signals: crossing their arms in front of their chests indicates an
emergency, jutting a fist up means, 'hey, pay attention,' and a thumb-up means
everything is OK.
If all else fails, they will hustle to a designated
spot with a clear line of sight to the Russian antenna.
There's also the fatigue factor, and not just from
all the extra scampering around.
Russian spacesuits are more pressurized than U.S.
suits, and so it will be harder and take longer for Fincke and Padalka to undo
American bolts, using American tools designed for American gloves.
Over the past few weeks, as the spacewalk has been
bumped and repeatedly rescheduled, Fincke has kept a sense of humor and
emphasized the need for flexibility.
At least the repair itself should be easy, says
Fincke, a newcomer to spacewalking. He figures the tricky part will be the long
trip over -- 45 minutes, at least -- and the long trip back. But, oh, the
rewards.
Riding on the end of the extendible boom will be
"something to write home about."
"And boy, I can't wait to take a look at that
view."
(China Daily/Agencies) |