The Sun (Lowell)

No toilet for returning Spacex crew

- By Marcia Dunn AP Aerospace Writer

cape canaveral, fla. » The astronauts who will depart the Internatio­nal Space Station as early as this weekend will be stuck using diapers on the way home because of their capsule’s broken toilet. NASA astronaut Megan Mcarthur described the situation Friday as “suboptimal” but manageable.

“Spacefligh­t is full of lots of little challenges,” she said during a news conference from orbit. “This is just one more that we’ll encounter and take care of in our mission. So we’re not too worried about it.”

The trip home can take up to 20 hours.

Mission managers could decide later Friday whether to bring Mcarthur and her three crewmates back in their Spacex capsule before launching their replacemen­ts. That launch already has been delayed more than a week by bad weather and an undisclose­d medical issue involving one of the crew.

French astronaut Thomas Pesquet told reporters that the past six months have been intense up there. The astronauts conducted a series of spacewalks to upgrade the station’s power grid, endured inadverten­t thruster firings by docked Russian vehicles that sent the station into brief spins, and hosted a private Russian film crew — a space station first.

They also had to deal with the toilet leak, pulling up panels in their Spacex capsule and discoverin­g pools of urine. The problem was first noted during Spacex’s private flight in September, when a tube came unglued and spilled urine beneath the floorboard­s. Spacex fixed the toilet on the capsule awaiting liftoff, but deemed the one in orbit unusable.

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