The Mercury News Weekend

Spacewalki­ng cosmonauts release 3-D-printed satellite

- By Marcia Dunn AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA.

» Spacewalki­ng cosmonauts set free the world’s first satellite made almost entirely with a 3-D printer on Thursday.

Russians Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy ended up releasing five nanosatell­ites by hand. One by one, the tiny craft — no more than 1 to 2 feet in size — tumbled safely away from the Internatio­nal Space Station.

The exterior casing of the first one tossed overboard was made with a 3- D printer. So were the battery packs inside. Researcher­s want to see how 3- D- made parts weather the space environmen­t.

The 3-D satellite contains regular electronic­s. It also holds greetings to planet Earth in a variety of languages, courtesy of students at Siberia’s Tomsk Polytechni­c University, where the satellite was made.

The other satellites deployed Thursday have traditiona­l spacecraft parts.

Each weighs just 10 to 24 pounds. They’re ex- pected to orbit for five to six months.

One commemorat­es the 60th anniversar­y of the world’s first satellite, Sputnik 1, launched Oct. 4, 1957, by the Soviet Union. Another pays tribute to Russia’s father of rocketry, Konstantin Tsiolkovsk­y. He was born 160 years ago next month.

The remaining two small satellites involve navigation and other experiment­s.

Yurchikhin and Ryazanskiy completed the satellite releases within an hour of venturing outside. Barely a minute passed between a few of the launches. The rest of their work took longer than expected, however, and Russia’s Mission Control outside Moscow sent the planned six- hour spacewalk into overtime. It ended up lasting 7 ½ hours, and the cosmonauts said their hands were tired. All but one task got done.

“We will have actually some grounds to get drunk today, I think,” one of the cosmonauts joked in Russian. A flight controller replied that he’d do it for them.

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