Two Russian cosmonauts in Orlan spacesuits wrapped up a 8-hour, 7-minute
spacewalk to attempt the installation of photographic equipment on the exterior
of the International Space Station at 4:07 p.m. EST Friday.
Commander Oleg Kotov and Flight Engineer Sergey Ryazanskiy promptly completed
the main objective of Friday’s spacewalk -- the installation of a pair of
high-fidelity cameras as part of a Canadian commercial endeavor designed to
downlink Earth observation imagery – but had to remove them later due to an
unspecified problem that prevented telemetry from being received on the ground
by Russian flight controllers.
As planned, Kotov and Ryazanskiy attached the two cameras on a combination
biaxial pointing platform and spacewalk workstation that was installed on the
Zvezda service module during a spacewalk on Nov. 9. Kotov and Ryazanskiy also
installed a foot restraint to the workstation.
After routing data and telemetry cables for the medium resolution camera,
Kotov jettisoned the cable reel opposite of the station’s direction of travel
for disposal.
When the flight control team at the Russian Mission Control Center outside
Moscow did not see the expected telemetry and electrical connectivity from the
medium and high resolution cameras, Kotov and Ryazanskiy were directed to remove
the cameras and return them to the airlock for further analysis. The
spacewalkers also were instructed to take detailed photographs of the electrical
connectors mated earlier for additional review.
In addition to their work with the two cameras, the spacewalkers also removed
the Vsplesk experiment package and jettisoned it. Vsplesk, installed during an
Expedition 17 spacewalk in July 2008, was designed to monitor seismic effects
using high-energy particle streams in the near-Earth environment. Kotov and
Ryazanskiy replaced it with hardware for a more sophisticated
earthquake-monitoring experiment, Seismoprognoz, which they attached to a Zvezda
handrail.
Because of the issue in activating the cameras, Kotov and Ryazanskiy did not
have time to complete the all of their planned tasks, which included the
jettisoning of a frame that once held three Micro-Particles Capturer and Space
Environment Exposure Device (MPAC & SEED) units for a Japanese space
exposure study and the installation of a payload boom.
Friday's spacewalk eclipsed the record for the longest Russian spacewalk set
by Expedition 36 Flight Engineers Fyodor Yurchikhin and Alexander Misurkin, who
conducted a 7-hour, 29 minute excursion on Aug. 16.
With the completion of his fifth spacewalk, Kotov now has 30 hours and 43
minutes of total spacewalking time. Ryazanskiy has a total of 13 hours and 57
minutes over his two spacewalks.
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