China Daily (Hong Kong)

Victory for astronauts on ‘critical’ repair mission

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MIAMI, Florida — Two US astronauts successful­ly completed what NASA described as a “critical” spacewalk to repair a failed piece of equipment that helps power the Internatio­nal Space Station.

“We have declared victory,” NASA commentato­r Rob Navias said about two hours into the emergency spacewalk by space station commander Peggy Whitson, 57, and flight engineer Jack Fischer, 43.

The reason for the outing was the sudden breakdown on Saturday of a computer relay box known as a multiplexe­r-demultiple­xer unit.

The MDM — which is about the size of a small microwave oven and would weigh 23 kilograms on Earth — helps operate solar arrays, electrical power generation and robotic equipment at the ISS.

It also regulates the operation of radiators and cooling loops.

Since there are two MDMs at the orbiting outpost, the loss of one did not jeopardize the lives of the crew or bring a halt to station operations.

Still, a space agency spokesman described Tuesday’s mission as a “critical contingenc­y spacewalk” and called it a “high priority” to replace the failed box as soon as possible.

During the shorter than normal spacewalk — which lasted just two hours and 46 minutes, much less than the typical 6.5 hours — Whitson took the lead and replaced the MDM.

After she took out the malfunctio­ning unit, she spotted some flakes of debris, and returned briefly to the airlock for equipment to clean the area before installing the new box.

“We now have two healthy MDMs,” Navias said afterward.

Fischer, making the second spacewalk of his career, installed a pair of antennas on the US Destiny Laboratory module to enhance wireless communicat­ion capability for future spacewalks.

It was unclear what caused the MDM to fail.

The unit had just been installed in March during a spacewalk by Whitson and Expedition 50 commander Shane Kimbrough.

Third place

Nor was it the first time an MDM unit failed.

“A similar MDM replacemen­t spacewalk was conducted in April 2014 by Expedition 39 crew members Steve Swanson and Rick Mastracchi­o of NASA,” the US space agency said.

Whitson is the most experience­d woman spacewalke­r in the world, and during the spacewalk she leapt to third place for the most time spent doing spacewalks.

She now has a total of 60 hours, 21 minutes over 10 career walkabouts in space.

The world record holder for spacewalki­ng is Russian cosmonaut Anatoly Solovyev, who completed 16 spacewalks totaling 78 hours, 21 minutes.

 ?? PROVIDED BY NASA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Astronaut Jack Fischer works outside the ISS. Fischer and Peggy Whitson, not pictured, performed the station’s 200th spacewalk.
PROVIDED BY NASA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Astronaut Jack Fischer works outside the ISS. Fischer and Peggy Whitson, not pictured, performed the station’s 200th spacewalk.

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