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Crew Completes Repairs to Space Station

August 17, 2010 By Mike Hickerson 1 Comment

Astronauts Douglas Wheelock and Tracy Caldwell Dyson completed repairs to the International Space Station Monday by making their third space walk in a week.

The astronauts wrapped up repairs to a faulty cooling system as they circled 220 miles (355 kilometers) above Earth.

“You know, when you’re … looking down like this at the Earth, it’s like extreme hang gliding,” Caldwell Dyson called down.

The orbiting lab has been operating on only half its normal cooling capability ever since a crucial ammonia coolant pump failed July 31. It took two spacewalks, but Wheelock and Caldwell Dyson finally removed the broken pump last week.

Early Monday, the spacewalking team was trying to install a spare pump. If it succeeds, NASA expects to have the disabled cooling loop back in action by Thursday.

NASA said a fourth spacewalk eventually will be needed to move the failed pump into a better storage location, but managers are uncertain whether this crew or another will carry out the work.

The bathtub-size pumps — weighing 780 pounds (355 kilograms) apiece — are needed to drive ammonia through cooling loops and keep equipment from overheating. Four spare pumps are on board; the one being installed Monday was the oldest of the bunch. It flew up in 2006.

Engineers are uncertain how and why an electrical short knocked out one of the two prime ammonia pumps two weeks ago. The breakdown left the space station with only one functioning cooling line and forced the six-person crew to turn off unnecessary equipment and halt science research.

NASA said the repair effort is one of the most challenging ever undertaken at the 12-year-old space station. Indeed, the astronauts’ work was hampered by a large ammonia leak that erupted during the first spacewalk on Aug. 7.

A special team of engineers has been working practically nonstop ever since the trouble struck.

The space station is home to three Americans and three Russians. It’s supposed to continue working until 2020, but that will become increasingly difficult to accomplish once NASA’s shuttles stop flying next year. Two shuttle missions remain, with a third possible if the White House and Congress sign off on it.

Once the three remaining shuttles are retired, the Russian, European and Japanese space agencies will take over all crew and cargo shipments until NASA has a new rocket ready to go.

Filed Under: Space News

Comments

  1. Lejon from Chandler says

    August 17, 2010 at 4:38 pm

    “…weighing 780 pounds…”

    Um… no. Currently, at 220 miles in space, they weigh “0 pounds”. Weight is a measurement of force. They do, in fact, still have mass of 355 kg, though… Perhaps they should have said “weighing 780 lbs at sea level at standard temperature and pressure”…

    Reply

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