Vancouver Sun

Astronauts report trouble with module

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Russian astronauts aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station informed mission control in Moscow on Thursday about a problem with the new Russian Nauka module after it docked at the station a few hours earlier, RIA news agency reported.

The astronauts flagged an unplanned restart of Nauka's engines, RIA reported, citing conversati­ons between the team and their headquarte­rs on Earth, translated by the NASA space agency.

The situation did not pose a risk to astronauts, RIA quoted a NASA official as saying in the broadcast, and the Nauka engines have now been switched off.

The U.S. space agency's headquarte­rs in Houston told the astronauts that the unplanned restart of Nauka's engines had changed the position of the ISS in space, RIA reported.

The engines of another module on the space station were then activated to compensate and reposition the ISS, RIA cited Houston specialist­s as saying, describing it as a “tug of war” between the two modules.

Russia's Roscosmos space agency attributed the issue to Nauka's engines having to work with residual fuel in the craft, TASS news agency reported.

“The process of transferri­ng the Nauka module from flight mode to `docked with ISS' mode is underway. Work is being carried out on the remaining fuel in the module,” Roscosmos was cited by TASS as saying.

Russia upgraded its capabiliti­es on the ISS on Thursday after its new Nauka module, set to serve as a research lab, storage unit and airlock, successful­ly docked with it after a nervy journey from Earth.

A live broadcast from the Russian space agency Roscosmos showed the module, a multipurpo­se laboratory named after the Russian word for `science', docking with the ISS at 1329 GMT, a few minutes later than scheduled.

“According to telemetry data and reports from the ISS crew, the on-board systems of the station and the Nauka module are operating normally,” Roscosmos said in a statement.

After its launch last week from Kazakhstan's Baikonur Cosmodrome, the module suffered a series of glitches that raised concern about whether the docking procedure would go smoothly.

 ?? OLEG NOVITSKIY / ROSCOSMOS / HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Russian astronauts aboard the Internatio­nal Space station reported a problem with the New Russian Nauka module after an unplanned restart of Nauka's engines.
OLEG NOVITSKIY / ROSCOSMOS / HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Russian astronauts aboard the Internatio­nal Space station reported a problem with the New Russian Nauka module after an unplanned restart of Nauka's engines.

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