The Niagara Falls Review

Spacewalke­rs lose piece of shielding, use patch instead

- MacGyver-like

MARCIA DUNN

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Spacewalki­ng astronauts carried out an impromptu patch job outside the Internatio­nal Space Station on Thursday, after losing a vital piece of cloth shielding when it floated away.

As the drama unfolded, Peggy Whitson set a record for the most spacewalks by a woman — eight — and the most accumulate­d time spent spacewalki­ng — just over 53 hours.

The bundled-up shield somehow came loose as Whitson and Shane Kimbrough worked to install micrometeo­rite protection over a spot left exposed when a new docking port was relocated. Mission Control monitored the shield as it drifted away and, a couple hours later, determined it posed no risk to the 402-km-high outpost. It was visible in the distance as a white dot.

As Whitson and Kimbrough installed the three remaining shields, Mission Control quickly came up with a TV plan for a patch. The astronauts filled the gap using the cover that they had just removed from the relocated docking port.

The cover is made of the same material as the shielding, according to Mission Control, and just as capable of protecting against potential strikes by bits of space debris and providing thermal control. The entire space station is protected, in some fashion, against possible debris strikes.

It was not immediatel­y clear how the shield got away, said NASA spokesman Dan Huot. It’s supposed to be tethered to the station or spacewalke­r at all times. Frustratio­n was evident in Whitson’s voice as she told Mission Control about the mishap. She was delighted, though, by how well everything turned out.

“You guys came up with a fantastic plan — on short notice. That’s amazing,” Whitson radioed.

Spacewalke­rs have lost things before, including an entire tool kit in 2008. But the getaway items are usually small, like bolts. The lost fabric shield is relatively large: It weighs 18 pounds and, when unfolded, measures about 150 by 60 centimetre­s and is about 5 cm thick. It eventually will re-enter the atmosphere and burn up.

The relocated docking port will serve as one of two parking spots for commercial crew capsules under developmen­t by SpaceX and Boeing. It was disconnect­ed during a spacewalk last Friday by Kimbrough, the space station’s commander and a six-time spacewalke­r. Then flight controller­s in Houston moved it to a new and better location Sunday. The spacewalke­rs hooked up heater cables to the port Thursday.

Midway through the sevenhour excursion, Whitson surpassed the record for women of 50 hours and 40 minutes of total accumulate­d spacewalki­ng time, held by former station resident Sunita Williams. Williams is one of four NASA astronauts who will make the initial test flights of the SpaceX Crew Dragon and Boeing Starliner capsules. The first flight could occur as early as next year.

Whitson is now No. 5 on the all-time spacewalki­ng list.

A Russian holds the top spot: Anatoly Solovyev with 16 spacewalks for a grand total of 82 hours.

The 57-year-old Whitson has been in orbit since November. This is her third space station stint. Altogether, she’s spent more than 500 days off the planet, also more than any other woman.

She’s scheduled to return to Earth in June, but may stick around an extra three months, until September. NASA is hoping to take advantage of an extra seat in the Russian Soyuz spacecraft that’s due to launch with two astronauts next month and return in September.

NASA, meanwhile, has indefinite­ly delayed a spacewalk that had been scheduled for next week. A shipment with replacemen­t parts needed for that spacewalk is on hold because of rocket concerns at Cape Canaveral, Florida. Shipper Orbital ATK is relying on the United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V to haul up the goods.

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 ?? NASA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image, U.S. astronauts Peggy Whitson, above, and Shane Kimbrough work on the outside of the Internatio­nal Space Station on Thursday, March 30, 2017. An important piece of micrometeo­rite shielding was lost during the spacewalk.
NASA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image, U.S. astronauts Peggy Whitson, above, and Shane Kimbrough work on the outside of the Internatio­nal Space Station on Thursday, March 30, 2017. An important piece of micrometeo­rite shielding was lost during the spacewalk.
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