[TML] Astronaut prepares to risk life for spacewalk

Traveller at dhimaging.com.au Traveller at dhimaging.com.au
Fri Nov 2 23:47:48 MDT 2007


It's easy to forget just how dangerous near earth orbit is...

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=169924


Astronaut prepares to risk life for spacewalk

NASA has planned for the worst in a risky, high-stakes spacewalk on Saturday
that must succeed for construction to continue aboard the International
Space Station, officials said on Friday.

But managers are hoping three days of around-the-clock engineering
assessments, private talks with the orbiting shuttle and space station crews
and the detailed plans to send a spacewalker to the far outer reaches of the
station will boil down to a simple, 30-minute wiring job to buttress broken
hinges on a damaged solar wing panel.

It's a snag clear. It's not rocket science," lead spacewalk planner Dina
Contella said.

Though he is one of NASA's most experienced spacewalkers, astronaut Scott
Parazynski has not practiced the steps he must take to clear suspected
jammed wiring and other hardware glitches that caused the wing to rip in two
places while it was being extended on Tuesday.

NASA had not planned for that possibility, nor a second problem, which has
been temporarily postponed, with the solar power system on the other side of
the station's frame. That wing is now locked in place to avoid using its
contaminated rotary joint.

The ripped wing is about 75 per cent unfurled and needs to be extended to
its full 34-metre-long span for structural rigidity. Without that, NASA said
it will not risk adding more modules to the outpost. Europe's Columbus
laboratory, already running five years behind schedule, is next in line for
launch, followed by Japan's three-part Kibo complex next year.

"At this point we have damage at both ends of the truss," said space station
flight director Derek Hassmann. "We need to address one of these problems
before we can proceed."

Choreographing a spacewalk that will put an astronaut farther from his
spaceship than ever before was a daunting task that has preoccupied the
Johnson Space Center flight control team since Tuesday.

To reach the tattered wing, Parazynski will strap himself to the end of an
extension boom, borrowed from the space shuttle, that will be held by the
space station's 15-metre-long robot arm, providing about 23 metres of reach.
Just the ride to the work site will take 45 minutes, Contella said.

Once in position, Parazynski will be dependent on his spacewalking partner,
Douglas Wheelock, to warn him of danger, watch his tools and tethers and
help robot arm operators in the space station position him correctly.

NASA likes to keep its spacewalkers closer to the airlock in case they have
to return quickly due to a spacesuit problem or other emergency. Fixing the
station's broken wing, however, will cut into that margin of safety.

Parazynski also must be careful to avoid touching anything that could
trigger an electrical shock. His tools and even the metal rings on his
spacesuit have been wrapped in insulating tape but "we're treating the
situation as if there are hot wires that he could possibly contact,"
Hassmann said.

If all goes well, Parazynski will install six home-made straps that fit like
cuff links through holes in the solar power wing's frame.

Hassmann said his team's advice to the crew: "Go slow, be careful and use
all your resources.

NASA is sketching out a backup plan to extend Discovery's stay at the
station in case a second repair spacewalk is needed. The shuttle arrived at
the station eight days ago and is slated to depart on Monday.

"I have hopes it's going to be a quick and easy fix," Hassmann said.

The shuttle is due back at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday.



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