International Space Station Status Report: SS06-050

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Nov. 17, 2006

Katherine Trinidad
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0668

James Hartsfield 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
STATUS REPORT: SS06-050

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT: SS06-050

Houston - Expedition 14 Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria and flight 
engineers Mikhail Tyurin and Thomas Reiter continue to prepare for a 
spacewalk Wednesday, Nov. 22, out of the International Space 
Station's Russian Pirs Docking Compartment airlock. 

Lopez-Alegria, who will make his sixth spacewalk, and Tyurin, with 
three previous spacewalks to his credit, climbed into Russian Orlan 
spacesuits Friday to test all systems and communications gear. This 
ended a week during which the spacewalkers also installed U.S. lights 
on their suit helmets, reviewed procedures for the extravehicular 
activity and performed leak checks on the Progress 22 craft currently 
docked to the Pirs airlock. 

The six-hour spacewalk includes a commercial golf demonstration by 
Tyurin. Under a commercial agreement between the Russian Federal 
Space Agency and a Canadian golf company, Tyurin will hit a golf ball 
into space from a spring-mounted tee on the ladder next to the hatch 
of Pirs. The ball will be tapped over the back of the station's 
Russian segment so that the ball travels away from the complex. NASA 
flight controllers have calculated that it will burn up in the 
atmosphere in about three days. The ball weighs much less than the 
standard 45 gram golf ball. The ball used for this demonstration 
weighs three grams, approximately the weight of three paper clips.

During the spacewalk, Tyurin will examine part of the ISS Progress 23 
cargo ship. One of the antennas for the Progress' automated docking 
system may have failed to fold back when the spacecraft approached 
the aft port of the Zvezda Service Module on Oct. 26. If it's 
necessary, Tyurin will manually retract that antenna.

Also, Lopez-Alegria and Tyurin will reposition a communications 
antenna on the aft end of Zvezda associated with next year's docking 
of the European Automated Transfer Vehicle, check restraining bolts 
on one of two Russian cargo cranes attached to Pirs and deploy an 
experiment to measure solar flares.

Coverage on NASA Television and www.nasa.gov begins at 4 p.m. CST. The 
spacewalk begins one hour later.

Wednesday marked the first live high-definition television broadcast 
from space. It featured Lopez-Alegria, with Reiter serving as camera 
operator. The broadcasts were conducted by NHK Television in Japan 
and the Discovery HD Theater. Known as the Space Video Gateway, the 
HD system onboard transmits high bandwidth digital television signals 
to the ground through a computer. Previously, high-definition video 
was recorded and then returned to Earth for viewing. 

Flight controllers this week continued to test one of the station's 
four control moment gyroscopes (CMGs). CMG-3 exhibited high 
vibrations and electrical currents in the past and was shut down Oct. 
9. The recent test results will be compared to a previous series of 
tests to provide additional data on the state of the gyroscope's 
accelerometer, lubricant and lubrication of the spin bearings. 

CMG-3 is scheduled to be removed and replaced on the STS-118 shuttle 
mission, targeted for launch in June 2007. The gyroscope will be 
stowed and returned to Earth on the STS-122 mission next fall. The 
station continues to function on three healthy CMGs without affecting 
operations.

Reiter also continued work this week on a suite of European Space 
Agency science experiments, including one called CASPER. Its 
objective is to develop ways to help astronauts sleep better during 
long-duration missions. Alteino Long Term Monitoring of Cosmic Rays 
or ALTCRISS is another experiment Reiter performed. It is allowing 
scientists to study the effects of shielding on cosmic rays. The 
information gained may help engineers better understand the radiation 
environment and how to provide efficient shielding against it.

The next station status report will be issued early Nov. 23 after the 
spacewalk, 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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