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Spacewalking astronauts replace ISS leaky pump

A handout video grabbed image made available by Nasa TV showing US astronauts, flight engineers Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn during their spacewalk at the International Space Station yesterday. The astronauts conducted the spacewalk to fix a leak discovered in the spaceship’s cooling system.

 

Reuters/Cape Canaveral, Florida

A pair of spacewalking astronauts wrapped up a hastily planned repair job yesterday to replace a suspect coolant pump needed to keep the International Space Station at full power.

Nasa astronauts Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn put on spacesuits and left the space station’s airlock shortly before 9am EDT (1300 GMT) to attempt to stem an ammonia coolant leak that cropped up on Thursday.

Over the next four hours, they installed a spare pump, then positioned themselves to check for signs of escaping ammonia ice crystals when the system was turned back on.

“No flakes,” Cassidy reported to flight controllers at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Engineers will monitor the system over the next several days and beyond to make sure the pump replacement fixed the problem.

“We certainly have come a long way in identifying a potential source,” said Nasa mission commentator Rob Navias as the astronauts returned to the station’s airlock. The entire spacewalk lasted 5-1/2 hours.

The station crew discovered a steady stream of ammonia flakes flowing away from the far left side of the station’s exterior frame on Thursday. Flight controllers spent the next 48 hours diagnosing the problem and coming up with potential solutions.

Engineers believed the leak most likely was coming from in or around a 260-lb (118-kg) pump that pushes ammonia throughout the system. The coolant dissipates heat from electronics in space station’s solar-powered electrical system.

The station can be reconfigured to compensate for a system shutdown, but if a second problem should occur, that likely would mean a cutback in power available for the experiments.

The $100bn station, which flies about 250 miles (400km) above Earth, is a research laboratory for biomedical, physics, astronomical and other experiments, as well as for technology development and demonstrations.

Today, station commander Chris Hadfield, the first Canadian to lead the international outpost, turns over the helm to Russian cosmonaut Pavel Vinogradov. Hadfield, Marshburn and cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, who have been aboard the station since December, are scheduled to depart tomorrow.

Their replacements - Nasa’s Karen Nyberg, Italy’s Luca Parmitano and Russian Fyodor Yurchikhin - are due to launch on May 28.

 

 

 

 

 

BELOW: Former US astronaut Buzz Aldrin addresses the “Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration” talk at the National Press Club in Washington on Friday.

 

 

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