Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NASA completes second repair event

Two more spacewalks are needed to fix cosmic ray detector

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Spacewalki­ng astronauts ventured out Friday for the second week in a row to repair a cosmic ray detector, this time actually cutting into the $2 billion instrument.

The Internatio­nal Space Station’s Luca Parmitano sliced through eight stainless steel tubes, using hardware store-type bolt cutters. That set the stage to install new coolant pumps during the third spacewalk on Dec. 2.

Parmitano had to sever the tubes in a specific order and notified Mission Control each time before cutting. His spacewalki­ng partner, Andrew Morgan,

backstoppe­d everything.

NASA likened the repair work to heart bypass surgery. At least four spacewalks are needed to fix the spectromet­er, on the hunt for elusive dark matter and antimatter for 8½ years. Without a new cooling system, the experiment — led by a Nobel laureate — would end.

NASA considers these the most complicate­d spacewalks since the Hubble Space Telescope repair missions a few decades ago. The spectromet­er was not designed to be operated on in orbit.

A zip tie got away from Parmitano — floating harmlessly into space — as he struggled to free power cables buried in the spectromet­er. Mission Control told him not to worry about it. It was the only snag in the 6½-hour spacewalk.

“To all of you up there, thanks again for another incredible” spacewalk, Mission Control radioed.

Parmitano, an Italian, and Morgan, an American, began the repair work last week. They spent years training for the operation before launching in July.

The 7½-ton spectromet­er rode to the space station during shuttle Endeavour’s final mission in 2011. If successful, the repairs will keep the device working throughout the life of the station, or another five to 10 years.

 ?? AP/NASA ?? Astronaut Luca Parmitano is guided along the Canadarm2 robotic arm Friday toward the spot where he worked on the space station’s cosmic-particle detector, cutting through stainless-steel tubes with bolt cutters.
AP/NASA Astronaut Luca Parmitano is guided along the Canadarm2 robotic arm Friday toward the spot where he worked on the space station’s cosmic-particle detector, cutting through stainless-steel tubes with bolt cutters.

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