Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

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If all goes well, flight controller­s in Houston will relocate the old docking port Sunday, using the station’s robotic arm. Then next Thursday, the crew will conduct another spacewalk to secure the unit.

SpaceX and Boeing are developing capsules capable of flying astronauts to and from the space station. Until the SpaceX Crew Dragon and Boeing Starliner come on line — possibly next year — U.S. astronauts will have to keep riding Russian rockets to orbit.

Before working on the docking port, Kimbrough replaced a computer-relay box with an upgraded version. Pesquet, meanwhile, looked for signs of a small ammonia coolant leak in outdoor plumbing.

He patted and tugged at hoses, but did not spot any frozen flakes of ammonia. A GoPro camera caught his every move for playback later.

“No flakes. All good,” Pesquet reported.

Also on the spacewalke­rs’ to-do list Friday: replace a pair of Japanese cameras and grease latching mechanisms on the end of the big robot arm.

NASA wants to cram in two and possibly three spacewalks before Kimbrough, the station’s commander, returns to Earth on April 10.

Before a third spacewalk can be conducted, however, Orbital ATK needs to launch a cargo ship to the space station with replacemen­t parts. That shipment was supposed to be there by now, but repeatedly has been delayed because of rocket concerns.

It’s unclear when the Atlas V rocket will be ready to soar from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

 ??  ?? This still image taken from video provided by NASA shows astronaut Shane Kimbrough, right, as he works on the Internatio­nal Space Station during a space walk Friday. Photos and text from wire services
This still image taken from video provided by NASA shows astronaut Shane Kimbrough, right, as he works on the Internatio­nal Space Station during a space walk Friday. Photos and text from wire services

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