NASA managers are evaluating whether to go for a Dec. 19 launch of
Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus commercial resupply craft or move ahead with a
series of spacewalks to repair a pump that is part of a cooling loop
that shutdown last Wednesday due to low temperatures seen in the line.
Ground controllers have been sending commands to another valve that
is part of the station’s cooling system. The hope is that this valve can
be positioned in a way to help maintain the proper temperature in the
loop, which could allow them to reintegrate part of the station’s
internal electronics.
Momentum continues at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia for the launch
of the Cygnus spacecraft Thursday at 9:19 p.m. EST. The new cargo craft
was loaded Saturday with its manifested gear and is targeted for
arrival at the International Space Station on Sunday.
Meanwhile, momentum continues at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia
for the launch of the Cygnus spacecraft Thursday at 9:19 p.m. EST. The
new cargo craft was loaded Saturday with its manifested gear and is
targeted for arrival at the International Space Station next week.
The Antares rocket’s upper stage was outfitted Monday with its
fairing that houses the Cygnus vehicle during ascent. The Antares is
scheduled to roll out to its launch pad early Tuesday morning pending a
review by station program managers.
NASA astronauts Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins began checking
their spacewalk tools, trying on their spacesuits and reviewing
procedures inside the Quest airlock over the weekend. The NASA
astronauts were assisted by Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata and
Expedition 38 Commander Oleg Kotov.
Kotov and Flight Engineer Sergey Ryazanskiy are also preparing for
spacewalk. This is a pre-planned spacewalk scheduled for Dec. 27 outside
the station’s Russian segment. The duo will install a foot restraint;
install medium and high resolution cameras; jettison gear from a pair of
external experiments; and install a new experiment as well as a payload
boom on the Zvezda service module.
Flight Engineer and fellow cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin worked
maintenance on the Russian side of station. He performed some plumbing
work, transferred science data to a laptop computer and updated the
station’s inventory management system.
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