San Diego Union-Tribune

SPACEWALKI­NG ASTRONAUTS PREP STATION

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Spacewalki­ng astronauts ventured out Sunday to install support frames for new, high-efficiency solar panels arriving at the Internatio­nal Space Station later this year.

NASA’s Kate Rubins and Victor Glover put the first set of mounting brackets and struts together, then bolted them into place next to the station’s oldest and most degraded solar wings. But the work took longer than expected, and they barely got started on the second set before calling it quits.

Rubins, a University of California San Diego graduate, will finish the job during a second spacewalk later this week.

The spacewalke­rs had to lug out the hundreds of pounds of mounting brackets and struts in 8foot dufflestyl­e bags. The equipment was so big and awkward that it had to be taken apart like furniture, just to get through the hatch.

Some of the attachment locations required extra turns of the power drill and still weren’t snug enough, as indicated by black lines. The astronauts had to use a ratchet wrench to deal with the more stubborn bolts, which slowed them down. At one point, they were two hours behind.

“Whoever painted this black line painted outside the lines a little bit,” Glover said at one troublesom­e spot.

“We’ll work on our kindergart­en skills over here,” Mission Control replied, urging him to move on.

With more people and experiment­s flying on the space station, more power will be needed to keep everything running, according to NASA.

The six new solar panels — to be delivered in pairs by SpaceX over the coming year or so — should boost the station’s electrical capability by as much as 30 percent.

Rubins and Glover tackled the struts for the first two solar panels, due to launch in June. Their spacewalk ended up lasting seven hours.

The eight solar panels up there now are 12 to 20 years old — most of them past their design lifetime and deteriorat­ing. Each panel is 112 feet long by 39 feet wide. Tip to tip counting the center framework, each pair stretches 240 feet, longer than a Boeing 777’s wingspan.

Boeing is supplying the new roll-up panels, about half the size of the old ones but just as powerful thanks to new solar cell technology. They’ll be placed at an angle above the old ones, which will continue to operate.

Sunday’s spacewalk was the third for infectious disease specialist Rubins and Navy pilot Glover — both of whom could end up flying to the moon.

They’re among 18 astronauts newly assigned to NASA’s Artemis moon-landing program. The next moonwalker­s will come from this group.

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Kate Rubins

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