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Station Crew Prepares For Next Spacewalk

Crew member Jeff Williams at work during a previous EVA outside the space station. Image credit: NASA
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) Aug 03, 2006
Space station crew members Jeff Williams and Thomas Reiter will work to avoid future shocks during a scheduled 6-hour-plus spacewalk on Wednesday.

They also will have a third station crew member for the first time in more than three years. Expedition 13 Commander Pavel Vinogradov will coach them through their pre-breathing exercise program and help them suit up for their outing.

The station crew was reduced to two members in May 2003 in the wake of the shuttle Columbia accident. Since then, spacewalkers have had to reconfigure station systems before donning their spacesuits without help.

Once the spacewalk begins, Williams and Reiter will be coached through their tasks by astronaut Steve Bowen from the ground at the Mission Control Center in Houston. He will act as spacewalk intra-vehicular officer.

The first and longest major task of the spacewalk is installation of the Floating Potential Measurement Unit. That device is designed to measure the electrical potential of the station so ways can be verified or devised to minimize arcing hazards as the ISS grows.

Williams, designated lead spacewalker, or EV1, will wear the U.S. spacesuit with red stripes. Reiter, EV2, will wear the all-white suit.

They will spend about half an hour setting up equipment after they emerge from the Quest airlock shortly before 10 a.m. Eastern Time. They then will move with the FPMU to a camera mount near the upper outboard end of the S1 (for Starboard One) truss. Total time allotted for the installation is one hour and 50 minutes.

Next, they will move back to the airlock. There they will install two Materials on International Space Station Experiment containers. MISSE 3 goes on one of the high-pressure tanks around the crew lock, while MISSE 4 is set up on Quest's outboard end.

The experiment, housed in suitcase-like containers left open, looks at the long-time effects of space on a variety of materials. The idea is to identify optimal materials for use in future spacecraft.

A little over three hours into the spacewalk, Williams will install a controller for a thermal radiator rotary joint on the S1 truss. Meanwhile, Reiter will replace a computer on S1.

While Reiter finishes that task, Williams will begin installation of a starboard jumper and spool positioning device on S1. Reiter will inspect a radiator beam valve module SPD site and install one there if necessary, then move on to install a port jumper and SPD.

The jumpers are designed to improve the flow of ammonia through the radiators once that coolant is installed.

Williams will begin setup for the final major task, test of an infrared camera designed to detect damage in a shuttle's reinforced carbon-carbon thermal protection. The camera is designed to detect damage by variations in temperature between sound and damaged RCC test sections.

After possible get-ahead tasks by Reiter and perhaps Williams and 30 minutes of cleanup, airlock entry and pressurization, the spacewalk is scheduled to end at 4:15 p.m.

This EVA represents the third spacewalk for both Williams and Reiter. It is the 69th spacewalk to support station assembly and maintenance and the 22nd originated from the Quest airlock.

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Hamming It Up Aboard Space Station Earns Ransom Top Astronaut Award
Houston TX (SPX) Aug 02, 2006
In the world of ham radio, just making contact with someone from each of the 50 states is an award-worthy feat. NASA engineer Kenneth G. Ransom helped the International Space Station crew take the distinction a little farther, however - about 220 miles straight up, to be exact. And it earned him a somewhat more unusual award: NASA's Silver Snoopy.







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