After delay, NASA astronauts set for spacewalk to replace faulty space station antenna
Two NASA astronauts were set to embark on a spacewalk on
Thursday to replace a faulty antenna on the International Space Station (ISS),
after a 48-hour delay prompted by an orbital debris alert later deemed to be of
no concern.
NASA TV planned live coverage of the 6-1/2-hour spacewalk,
scheduled to begin at 7:10 a.m. Eastern time (1210 GMT) as astronauts Thomas
Marshburn and Kayla Barron exit an airlock of the orbiting research lab some
250 miles (402 km) above Earth.
The outing is the fifth spacewalk for Marshburn, 61, a
medical doctor and former flight surgeon with two previous trips to orbit, and
a first for Barron, 34, a U.S. Navy submarine officer and nuclear engineer on
her debut spaceflight for NASA.
Their objective is to remove a defective S-band radio
communications antenna assembly, now more than 20 years old, and replace it
with a spare stowed outside the space station.
The space station is equipped with other antennae that can
perform the same functions, but installing a replacement system ensures an
ideal level of communications redundancy, NASA said.
Marshburn will work with Barron while positioned at the end
of a robotic arm maneuvered from inside by German astronaut Matthias Maurer of
the European Space Agency, with help from NASA crewmate Raja Chari.
The four arrived at the space station Nov. 11 in a SpaceX
Crew Dragon capsule launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, joining
two Russian cosmonauts and a NASA astronaut, Mark Vande Hei, already aboard the
orbiting outpost.
Four days later, an anti-satellite missile test
https://www.reuters.com/world/us-military-reports-debris-generating-event-outer-space-2021-11-15
conducted without warning by Russia generated a debris field in low-Earth
orbit, forcing the seven ISS crew members to take shelter in their docked
spaceships to allow for a quick getaway until the immediate danger passed, NASA
said.
The residual cloud of debris from the blasted satellite has
dispersed since then, according to Dana Weigel, NASA deputy manager of the ISS
program.
But NASA calculates that remaining fragments continue to
pose a "slightly elevated" background risk to the space station as a
whole, and a 7per cent higher risk of puncturing spacewalkers' suits, as compared
to before Russia's missile test, Weigel told reporters on Monday.
Nevertheless, NASA determined those risk levels, while
heightened, fell within tolerable boundaries and moved ahead with preparations
to conduct the spacewalk as originally planned on Tuesday.
Hours before the operation was to begin, NASA received an
alert from U.S. military space trackers warning of a newly detected
debris-collision threat, prompting mission control to delay the extra-vehicular
activity (EVA) mission.
On Tuesday afternoon, NASA said its evaluation concluded the
debris in question - its origin left unclear - posed no risk to spacewalkers or
the station after all, and the antenna replacement was rescheduled for Thursday
morning.
Thursday's exercise marks the 245th spacewalk in support of
assembly and upkeep of the space station, which this month surpassed 21 years
of continuous human presence, NASA said.
A NASA spokesman, Gary Jordan, said this week's spacewalk
postponement was believed to be the station's first ever caused by a debris
alert
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