Indian-American Sunita Williams ventured out of the International Space
Station (ISS) with a fellow astronaut on Thursday for a 6.5-hour
sojourn, her seventh so far, to fix an ammonia leak in the radiator
system.
Two spacewalking astronauts worked on the leaky radiator system outside
the ISS, just hours after the vessel barely dodged a menacing piece of
orbiting junk.
The U.S. space agency NASA ordered the space station to change position
on Wednesday to avoid a fragment from a communication satellite that was
destroyed in a high-speed collision three years ago.
Thrusters on a docked Russian supply ship were fired to move the
orbiting lab out of harm’s way. But a computer error caused the
thrusters to malfunction, and the space station did not reach the
desired altitude.
NASA officials said the space station and its six residents were safe despite their lower-than-intended orbit.
Space station commander Sunita Williams and Japanese astronaut Akihiko
Hoshide wasted no time installing jumper cables outside their home for
the past four months. Their objective was to isolate a suspect radiator
to help determine whether that is the source of the ammonia coolant leak
and deploy a spare radiator to bypass the troublesome section.
Engineers theorize that bits of space junk may have penetrated the
radiator or part of its system; another possibility is that the
12-year-old equipment simply cracked.
The radiators are needed to dissipate heat generated by electronic
equipment aboard the space station. Toxic ammonia is used as the
coolant, and the spacewalkers took care to avoid contamination.
In an interview with The Associated Press earlier this week,
Williams said the biggest risk is the uncertainty surrounding the leak.
“We have a lot of extra procedures just in case things don’t go exactly
as planned,” she said. “But we’ve dealt with ammonia before.”
A small leak was detected in this area in 2007. Spacewalking astronauts
added extra ammonia last year to shore up the system, but this past
summer, the leakage increased fourfold. At that rate, the affected power
channel could be offline by the end of the year.
That’s why Thursday’s spacewalk was ordered up, even though it comes
shortly before the departure of Williams and Hoshide. The two are
scheduled to return to Earth on Nov. 19, after a four-month mission.
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