NASA Creates Spacewalk Mishap Investigation Board

[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

 



July 23, 2013

Joshua Buck
Headquarters, Washington          
202-358-1100
jbuck@xxxxxxxx

Josh Byerly
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111
josh.byerly@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE 13-228

NASA Creates Spacewalk Mishap Investigation Board

WASHINGTON -- NASA has appointed a board to investigate the July 16 early termination of a spacewalk outside the International Space Station, develop a set of lessons learned from the incident and suggest ways to prevent a similar problem in the future.

The board will begin its work Friday, Aug. 2, in close coordination with a NASA engineering team already examining the spacesuit and life support equipment astronaut Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency (ESA) used during the excursion. The engineering team is working to determine why water built up inside Parmitano's helmet.

Chris Hansen, International Space Station chief engineer at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, will chair a five-member board.

The other four board members are:

-- Mike Foreman, NASA astronaut, Johnson Space Center, Houston

-- Richard Fullerton, International Space Station safety and mission assurance lead, Office of Safety and Mission Assurance, NASA Headquarters, Washington

-- Sudhakar Rajula, human factors specialist, Johnson Space Center, Houston

-- Joe Pellicciotti, chief engineer, NASA Engineering and Safety Center, Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt Md.

The board will have access to experts and support personnel including an ESA liaison.

Members will gather relevant information, analyze facts, conduct any necessary tests, identify the cause or causes of the anomaly and any contributing factors, and make recommendations to the NASA administrator to prevent similar incidents from occurring during future spacewalks.

The board's investigation will run parallel with the engineering analysis already underway. The engineering team is focused on resolving equipment trouble in an effort to enable U.S. spacewalks to resume. The mishap investigation board will look more broadly at past operations and maintenance, quality assurance, aspects of flight control and other organizational factors. The board's responsibility is to make observations and recommendations that can be applied to improve the safety of all of NASA's human spaceflight activities.

Because of the helmet problem, flight director David Korth terminated the spacewalk after only 1 hour, 32 minutes. It was to have lasted 6 1/2 hours. Parmitano and fellow spacewalker Chris Cassidy of NASA safely returned inside the orbiting outpost.

For more information about the International Space Station and investigation, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

-end-


NASA news releases and other information are available automatically by sending an e-mail message with the subject line subscribe to hqnews-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
To unsubscribe from the list, send an e-mail message with the subject line unsubscribe to hqnews-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.

 

_______________________________________________
Hqnews mailing list
Hqnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://newsletters.nasawestprime.com/mailman/listinfo/hqnews
[Index of Archives]     [JPL News]     [Cassini News From Saturn]     [NASA Marshall Space Flight Center News]     [NASA Science News]     [James Web Space Telescope News]     [JPL Home]     [NASA KSC]     [NTSB]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [Yosemite Discussion]     [NSF]     [Telescopes]

  Powered by Linux