The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

First all-female spacewalki­ng team makes history

- ByMarcia Dunn

Replied Meir: “We don’t want to take too much credit because there have been many others — female spacewalke­rs — before us. This is just the first time that there have been two women outside at the same time ... For us, this is really just us doing our job.”

NASA leaders, Girl Scouts and others also cheered Koch and Meir on. Parents also sent in messages of thanks and encouragem­ent via social media. NASA included some in its TV coverage. “Go girls go,” two young sisters wrote on a sign in crayon. A group of middle schoolers held a long sign reading “The sky is not the limit!!”

At the same time, many expressed hope this will become routine in the future.

Tracy Caldwell Dyson, a three-time spacewalke­r who looked on fromMissio­n Control in Houston, added: “Hopefully, this will now be considered normal.”

NASA originally wanted to conduct an all-female spacewalk last spring, but did not have enough medium-size suits ready to go until summer. Koch and Meir were supposed to install more new batteries in a spacewalk next week, but ventured out three days earlier to deal with an equipment failure that occurred over the weekend. It was the second such failure of a battery charger this year, puzzling engineers and putting a hold on future battery installati­ons for the solar power system.

NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e watched the big event unfold from Washington headquarte­rs.

“We have the right people doing the right job at the right time,” he said. “They are an inspiratio­n to people all over the world including me. And we’re very excited to get this mission underway.”

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi sent congratula­tions to Koch and Meir “for leaving their mark on history” and tweeted that they’re an inspiratio­n to women and girls across America.

The spacewalke­rs’ main job was to replace the faulty 19-year-old old charge-regulating device — the size of a big, bulky box — for one of the three new batteries that was installed last week by Koch and Andrew Morgan. As the seven-hour spacewalk drewto a close, Mission Control declared success, informing the astronauts that the new charger seemed to be working and the space station was back to full power. The women dragged in the broken unit so it can be returned to Earth early next year for analysis.

“Jessica and Christina, we are so proud of you,” said Morgan, one of four astronauts inside. He called them his “astrosiste­rs.”

Spacewalki­ng is widely considered themost dangerous assignment in orbit. Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano, who operated the station’s robot arm from inside during Friday’s spacewalk, almost drowned in 2013 when his helmet flooded with water from his suit’s cooling system.

“Everyone ought to be sending some positive vibes by way of airwaves to space for these two top-notch spacewalke­rs,” Dyson said early in the spacewalk.

Meir, a marine biologist making her spacewalki­ng debut, became the 228th person in the world to conduct a spacewalk and the 15th woman. It was the fourth spacewalk for Koch, an electrical engineer who is seven months into an 11-month mission that will be the longest ever by a woman. Both are members of NASA’s Astronaut Class of 2013, the only one equally split between women and men.

Pairing up for a spacewalk was especially meaningful for Koch and Meir; they’re close friends. They’re also both former Girl Scouts.

It took two decades for women to catch upwith men in the spacewalki­ng arena.

The world’s first spacewalke­r on March 18, 1965, Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov, died last week. NASA astronaut EdWhite became the first U.S. spacewalke­r less than three months after Leonov’s feat. Women did not follow out the hatch until 1984. The first was Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya. Sullivan followed three months later.

Friday’s milestone spacewalk was the 421st for team Earth.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo provided by NASA astronauts Christina Koch and Jessica Meir exit the Internatio­nal Space Station on Friday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo provided by NASA astronauts Christina Koch and Jessica Meir exit the Internatio­nal Space Station on Friday.

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