International Space Station Status Report: SS06-021

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April 28, 2006

Allard Beutel
Headquarters, Washington 
(202) 358-4769 

James Hartsfield
Johnson Space Center, Houston
(281) 483-5111

STATUS REPORT: SS06-021

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT: SS06-021

The 13th crew of the International Space Station this week began 
unloading -- and sank its teeth into -- some of the more than 5,000 
pounds of new supplies that arrived at the complex Wednesday. 

The ISS Progress 21 cargo spacecraft, which launched from the Baikonur 
Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Monday, docked at the station Wednesday. 
The ship was the first supply shipment for Expedition 13 Commander 
Pavel Vinogradov and Flight Engineer Jeff Williams, who have been in 
space for almost a month. 

The spacecraft brought fresh fruit and other foods, gifts from home, 
fuel, water, oxygen, spare parts and science gear. Two Progress cargo 
craft are now docked at the complex. Oxygen supplies from ISS 
Progress 20, which arrived in December, continue to be used to 
replenish the cabin air when required. The crew is loading that 
Progress with trash and unneeded equipment. The spacecraft will be 
jettisoned from the complex in mid-June. 

Early in the week, Williams replaced a Remote Power Control Module, a 
type of circuit breaker, in the station's Destiny laboratory. The 
power control module had not been functioning for some time, and 
electricity for many lab systems had been delivered via an alternate 
path. To gain access to the worksite for replacement of the 
component, Williams had to disassemble and remove his sleeping 
compartment. Mission Control sequentially powered off many lab 
systems and lights to facilitate the replacement. Williams 
accomplished all the work ahead of schedule, and the new power 
control module has been functioning well. 

Science activities aboard the station during the past week included 
work by Williams with the Capillary Flow Experiment, which is an 
investigation of fluid behavior in weightlessness that may assist in 
the design of future spacecraft. The crew members also completed 
urine collection and notes about their food consumption for an 
experiment studying the formation of kidney stones in weightlessness. 


Vinogradov completed routine maintenance of the station's Elektron 
system. It was powered off much of the week and reactivated today. 
The Elektron provides oxygen for the cabin air from water. 

Plans for next week include an engine firing to boost the station's 
altitude on Thursday, May 4; continued unloading of the newly arrived 
Progress vehicle; and periodic crew health checks. 

The next station status report will be issued on Friday, May 5, or 
earlier if events warrant. For more about the crew's activities and 
station sighting opportunities, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
-end-



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