International Space Station Status Report: SS07-30

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June 1, 2007

John Yembric
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0602

John Ira Petty
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111 

STATUS REPORT: SS07-30

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION STATUS REPORT: SS07-30

HOUSTON - The Expedition 15 crew completed the first of three planned 
spacewalks this week and prepared for the upcoming arrival of space 
shuttle Atlantis to the International Space Station.

On Wednesday, Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Flight Engineer Oleg 
Kotov stepped outside the station and installed five additional 
debris protection panels on the conical section of the Zvezda Service 
Module, the area between its large and small diameters. The aluminum 
debris protection panels are designed to shield the module from 
micro-meteoroids.

Also during the spacewalk, the cosmonauts relocated a Global 
Positioning System (GPS) antenna cable. The cosmonauts moved the GPS 
cable to assist the rendezvous and docking of the European Automated 
Transfer Vehicle later this year.

On June 6, Yurchikhin and Kotov are set to wear Russian spacesuits 
again and install 12 additional protection panels on Zvezda. They 
also will install a section of an Ethernet cable on the Zarya module 
and a Russian experiment called Biorisk on the Pirs Docking 
Compartment.

During the second spacewalk, Flight Engineer Suni Williams will remain 
aboard the station as the spacewalk choreographer, as she did this 
week, advising and keeping the spacewalkers on schedule.

Additionally this week, Williams packed science payload and personal 
items she will bring with her when she returns to Earth at the end of 
the upcoming STS-117 shuttle mission, scheduled for launch Friday, 
June 8 at 7:38 p.m. EDT.

Williams collected her fifth and final set of blood and urine samples 
for the Nutritional Status Assessment, which measures physiological 
changes in the human body during spaceflight. The samples are stored 
at minus 80 degrees Celsius in the Minus-Eighty Laboratory Freezer. 
The experiment will help researchers understand bone metabolism, 
oxidative damage, vitamin and mineral status and hormonal changes and 
how they relate to stress, bone and muscle metabolism. The results 
should provide a better understanding of what happens 
physiologically, and when it happens, to crew members on 
long-duration space missions.

Science activities on the International Space Station are coordinated 
by NASA payload teams at Johnson Space Center, Houston, and Marshall 
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. Marshall is the home of the 
Payload Operations Center linked to Mission Control in Houston.

For more about the crew's activities and station sighting 
opportunities, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
-end-



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