The Day

Shuttle astronaut Donald Peterson

- By ELLIE SILVERMAN The Washington Post

Donald H. Peterson Sr., an astronaut who served on the maiden voyage of the space shuttle Challenger and performed a spacewalk to test the ability of repairing the vehicle while it orbited more than 170 miles above the Earth, died May 27 at his home in El Lago, Texas. He was 84.

The cause was Alzheimer’s disease and bone cancer, said a daughter, Shari Peterson.

An Air Force veteran, Peterson joined NASA’s astronaut corps in September 1969, two months after Neil Armstrong led the historic first landing on the moon. Fourteen years later, Peterson joined the crew of the sixth NASA space shuttle mission — and the Challenger’s first flight. (The shuttle exploded in 1986 on its 10th mission.)

Soviet and American astronauts had conducted spacewalks since 1965, but the ability to exit the shuttle was an important step toward being able to perform repair and maintenanc­e work on a space vehicle.

Peterson and fellow mission specialist Story Musgrave dressed in 250-pound white spacesuits with attached backpacks that allowed for greater mobility.

Before exiting the Challenger, Peterson had to breathe pure oxygen for three-and-a-half hours, to gradually reduce excess nitrogen from his body. This was done to avoid decompress­ion sickness, a condition similar to what scuba divers experience when changing air pressures too rapidly.

The fresh oxygen made a “nice whishing sound,” so Peterson turned his receiver down and fell into “probably the best sleep I had on orbit,” he recalled in a NASA oral-history interview in 2002. “People asked, ‘How in the world can you sleep just before you’re getting ready to go?’ I said, ‘Well, you know, you get tired enough, you can sleep almost anywhere.’”

By 4:30 p.m., Peterson and Musgrave were in the 60-foot cargo bay, checking maintenanc­e materials that future crews would need to preserve and, if necessary, repair the spacecraft. For about four hours, they appeared to move “like underwater swimmers” as the shuttle orbited the Earth at 17,500 mph, The Washington Post reported at the time.

The men were roped to the shuttle’s cargo bay while they tested their ability to carry a weighted bag, use a hand winch and perform other tasks.

After launching a satellite, the crew decided they should test what would happen if the electronic motors powering the ability to tilt the collar at the back of the Orbiter stopped working.

“We had foot restraints, but it took so long to set them up and move them around, that we didn’t want to do that,” Peterson said in the NASA interview. “So I just held on with one hand, actually, to a piece of sheet metal, which is not the best way to hold on, and cranked the wrench with my other hand, and my legs floated out behind me. So as I cranked, my legs were flailing back and forth, like a swimmer, to react the load on the wrench.”

During this test, his suit started to leak. “I’ve got an alarm,” Peterson told Musgrave.

“Story stopped what he was doing and came over,” Peterson recalled. “We were trying to check what was going on, and the seal popped back in place and the leak stopped.” They then finished the procedure.

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