The Guardian (USA)

Internatio­nal Space Station hit by major power shortage

- Associated Press

The Internatio­nal Space Station has been hit by a major power shortage that has forced a delivery from SpaceX to be delayed.

SpaceX was supposed to launch a shipment on Wednesday. But an old power-switching unit malfunctio­ned at the space station on Monday and knocked two power channels offline. The six remaining power channels still worked normally, according to Nasa.

Nasa said on Tuesday that the station and its six astronauts were safe. But because of the hobbled solar-power grid, the SpaceX launch was put off until at least Friday. Nasa wants to replace the failed unit to restore full power before sending up the SpaceX Dragon cargo capsule.

The breakdown has left the station’s robot arm outside with one functionin­g power channel instead of two. Two power sources are required – one as a backup – when the robot arm is used to capture visiting spacecraft like the Dragon.

Flight controller­s will use the robot arm to replace the faulty unit with a spare later this week, saving the astronauts from going out on a spacewalk.

There is no rush for this delivery. Northrop Grumman launched supplies two weeks ago.

Solar wings collect and generate electricit­y for the entire space station. Any breakdown in this critical system can cut into power and affect operations.

SpaceX, meanwhile, is still investigat­ing this month’s loss of its new Dragon capsule designed for astronauts.

Six weeks after a successful test flight without a crew to the space sta

tion, the Dragon was engulfed in flames during a ground test. SpaceX was in the process of firing the capsule’s thrusters on a test stand. SpaceX and Nasa have offered few details. But the accident is sure to delay launching a crew Dragon with two Nasa astronauts on board.

 ??  ?? An empty SpaceX Crew Dragon being held by the internatio­nal space station’s robotic arm. Photograph: AP
An empty SpaceX Crew Dragon being held by the internatio­nal space station’s robotic arm. Photograph: AP

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