Space Station astronauts take spacewalk (Agencies) Updated: 2005-01-26 21:06
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The two space station astronauts left their orbiting
home in the hands of ground controllers Wednesday and floated outside to install
an experimental robotic arm and inspect vents that might be causing air-supply
equipment breakdowns.
The spacewalk — unable to be completely televised because of a cold station
antenna — was the first in Leroy Chiao and Salizhan Sharipov's mission, now at
the 3 1/2-month point.
![U.S. station commander Leroy Chiao works outside the Zvezda module during a televised spacewalk Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2005. Chiao and Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov worked outside the International space station for 5 plus hours to install commercial experiments and work platforms. [AP]](xin_23010227144566352848.jpg) U.S. station
commander Leroy Chiao works outside the Zvezda module during a
televised spacewalk Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2005. Chiao and Russian cosmonaut
Salizhan Sharipov worked outside the International space station for 5
plus hours to install commercial experiments and work platforms.
[AP] | "Hello, space, my old friend," Chiao, a veteran spacewalker, said as he
exited.
A little earlier, flight controllers teased Sharipov for singing as he got
ready to make his first-ever spacewalk. "You could hear that, huh?" he asked
with a laugh. The singing and humming continued outside.
Because of the grounding of NASA's shuttle fleet, the international space
station has been limited to two residents, one fewer than usual. As a result, no
one was left inside during the spacewalk to monitor station systems — flight
controllers kept tabs on things, an increasingly common practice in the wake of
the Columbia disaster almost exactly two years ago.
Controllers did not get to see the start of the spacewalk 225 miles up
because of an unusually cold dish antenna, which was parked in a fixed position
at the station. They settled for audio only and said they would view the
videotaped event later, after the sun had warmed the antenna.
But the antenna warmed up sooner than expected, and live TV images of the
station filled Mission Control's screens less than an hour into the spacewalk.
The crisp images lasted only minutes, however, and reappeared sporadically.
Chiao, the American commander, and Sharipov, a Russian, set up the mini
robotic arm that arrived on Christmas Day along with much-needed groceries. Food
and water were running so low that the spacemen went on a lengthy diet that
ended only when the supply ship showed up.
They had a month of hearty eating to beef up for the 5 1/2-hour
Russian-managed spacewalk, which involved hauling the robotic arm and its
platform over 100 feet.
Germany's $10 million arm — a 20-inch device featuring two joints, two
cameras and a fingerlike pin at the end — is a smaller, simpler version of what
engineers hope will lead to satellite-repair robonauts in perhaps a few years.
An advanced version also could be placed on a rover and assist astronauts on the
moon or Mars by collecting rocks and performing other chores, said Klaus
Landzettel, project manager at the German Aerospace Center near Munich.
For now, the objective is simply to see whether the arm can move along a
28-inch curved track and survive for a year in the vacuum of space, Landzettel
said.
A late addition to the spacewalk was the inspection of exterior vents for the
main oxygen generator and air purifiers.
The Russian oxygen generator has broken down repeatedly, and engineers
speculated its vent might be clogged or corroded. The air-cleansing equipment
also has a history of malfunctions.
Sharipov found a large patch of dark, oily residue on one cleanser's vent and
a white substance — he described it as a honeycomb — on the oxygen generator's
vent. "They're going to be very good pictures," he said as he photographed the
goo.
During the spacewalk, flight controllers noticed a repeat of the same
mysterious forces that tilted the station on previous astronaut outings.
Wednesday's odd, off-center nudges forced the Russian thrusters to temporarily
take over steering control from the U.S. gyroscopes several times; the crewmen
stayed clear of the thruster firings.
Given Tuesday's late afternoon wake-up, it was expected to be a 20-hour
workday for the spacemen, a flight rule violation but a situation that NASA
considers unavoidable at times with only two people on board. Flight surgeons
vouched for the crew's motivation and strength, even after the mandatory
dieting.
One more spacewalk is on tap for Chiao and Sharipov in March, one month
before they return to Earth in a Russian capsule.
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