Author Topic: Expedition 66 Thread  (Read 345127 times)

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2100 on: 03/13/2022 03:29 am »
Astronaut Mark Vande Hei (@Astro_Sabot) will soon return home after completing a record-breaking 355 consecutive days on the
@space_station.

He joins 4 others who have spent extended time in space. His mission will help NASA prepare for future #Artemis missions to the Moon.

https://twitter.com/NASA_Johnson/status/1502679560348971008

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2101 on: 03/14/2022 08:45 am »
Roscosmos denied rumors that it would leave an American astronaut on the ISS.

Roscosmos assured that astronaut Vande Hai will return from the ISS to Earth on schedule.

10:20 14.03.2022

MOSCOW, March 14 - RIA Novosti. Russia will fulfill its obligations under the International Space Station: American astronaut Mark Vande Hay, as planned, will return to Earth on the Soyuz spacecraft on March 30, the Roscosmos press service told reporters.

Earlier in the Western media, there were reports that Russia was threatening the United States with the termination of cooperation on the ISS , which could result in problems with the return to Earth of American astronaut Mark Vande Hay.

Roskosmos has never given any reason to doubt its reliability as a partner. The safe work of the crew in the ISS orbit is a top priority for us. American astronaut Mark Vande Hei will return to Earth on March 30 aboard the Russian Soyuz MS-19 spacecraft, together with Anton Shkaplerov and Petr Dubrov ," the press service said.

Mark Vande Hei flew to the ISS on the Soyuz MS-18 together with Petr Dubrov and another Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky on April 9 last year.

On October 5, Soyuz MS-19 arrived at the station with Russian cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, actress Yulia Peresild and director Klim Shipenko . After 12 days of filming the film "Challenge" in orbit, the "film crew" together with Novitsky returned to Earth on the Soyuz MS-18, and Dubrov and Shkaplerov continued to work at the station.

https://ria.ru/20220314/mks-1778003636.html

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2102 on: 03/14/2022 08:49 am »
Roscosmos to bring US astronaut back to Earth March 30 as scheduled.

Earlier, some US media expressed doubts if Russia would agree to take US astronaut Mark Vande Hei back to Earth amid the sanctions imposed on Russia over the situation in Ukraine.

14 MAR, 01:51

MOSCOW, March 14. /TASS/. Russia’s space corporation Roscosmos has never given its partners the slightest chance to doubt its reliability. The US astronaut due to return to Earth soon will do so as scheduled on board Russia’s space capsule vehicle on March 30, the space corporation said on Monday.

Earlier, some US media expressed doubts if Russia would agree to take US astronaut Mark Vande Hei back to Earth amid the sanctions imposed on Russia over the situation in Ukraine.

"US astronaut Mark Vande Hei will travel back home in the Soyuz MS-19 spacecraft together with Russia’s Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Dubrov on March 30. Roscosmos has never let anybody doubt its reliability as a partner," the Roscosmos’ press-service has said.

The corporation stressed that the ISS crew’s safety has always been its top priority.

Earlier, Roscosmos CEO Dmitry Rogozin uploaded to his Telegram channel an extract from a Fox News broadcast claiming that Russia might leave the US astronaut in space.

The Soyuz MS-19 space capsule with Anton Shkaplerov, Pyotr Dubrov and Mark Vande Hei is expected to land on March 30. Dubrov and Vande Hei arrived on the ISS in the Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft together with Oleg Novitsky. This descent module brought back to Earth the two feature film crew members - actress Yulia Peresild and film director Klim Shipenko, who had arrived on the ISS together with Anton Shkaplerov in the Soyuz MS-19 on October 5.

https://tass.com/science/1421625

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2103 on: 03/14/2022 01:05 pm »
Spacewalk Preps Continue as Crew Studies Combustion, Biology

Kathleen Ellis Posted on March 14, 2022

Flight Engineers Kayla Barron and Raja Chari worked throughout Friday, March 11, preparing for a six-and-a-half hour spacewalk scheduled for 8:05 a.m. EDT on Tuesday, March 15. Barron and Chari checked out spacesuit emergency jet packs and other suit components including lights, cameras, and data recorders. They also configured a host of tools inside the U.S. Quest airlock they will use during their external maintenance job. The pair on Tuesday will install modification kits on the Starboard-4 truss structure that will ready the space station for its third roll-out solar array. NASA TV begins its live spacewalk broadcast on Tuesday at 6:30 a.m.

Astronauts Mark Vande Hei of NASA and Matthias Maurer of ESA (European Space Agency) took turns installing combustion science hardware in the Kibo laboratory module at the end of last week. Vande Hei later serviced samples for the Space Biofilms study that seeks to prevent molds from growing and impacting spacecraft systems and crew health. NASA Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn worked in the U.S. Destiny laboratory module servicing gear supporting a fire safety study that could inform future spacecraft designs.

https://blogs.nasa.gov/commercialcrew/2022/03/14/spacewalk-preps-continue-as-crew-studies-combustion-biology/

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2104 on: 03/14/2022 01:25 pm »
This blue @DLR_en EasyMotion suit adds energy to my workout It aims to increase efficiency by stimulating certain muscles with electrical impulses as I exercise. Each session is also supported by @esa's ECOS team. They know the procedures inside out & help me from the ground.

https://twitter.com/astro_matthias/status/1503371736057884672

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2105 on: 03/14/2022 02:21 pm »
ISS Daily Summary Report – 3/11/2022

Payloads:

Airborne Particulate Monitor (APM): The APM experiment hardware was removed from its US Lab location, its science data was transferred to a Station Support Computer (SSC) for downlink, and it was installed in Node 3. Air quality in crewed spacecraft is important for keeping astronauts healthy and comfortable. Although requirements exist for maximum allowable concentrations of particulate matter, currently no measurement capability verifies whether these requirements are met. APM demonstrates an instrument for measuring and quantifying the concentration of both small and large particles in spacecraft air. The data can be used to create a map of air quality in terms of particles and shed light on the sources of such particles.

Behavioral Core Measures (BCM): ROBoT-r research sessions consisting of a set of 12 runs/tests were performed. The Standardized Behavioral Measures for Detecting Behavioral Health Risks during Exploration Missions (Behavioral Core Measures) experiment initially examined a suite of measurements to reliably assess the risk of adverse cognitive or behavioral conditions and psychiatric disorders during long-duration spaceflight and evaluated the feasibility of those tests within the operational and time constraints of spaceflight for two crewmembers. Subsequent subjects perform a subset of the original activities to measure the performance capabilities of deconditioned crew members to complete either individual or crew telerobotic operations within the first 24 hours after landing. This information could help characterize what tasks a crewmember who has spent months in weightlessness can reasonably be expected to perform after landing on the surface of Mars.

Crew Interactive MObile companioN (CIMON): Following the successful software update earlier this week, checkouts and troubleshooting continued. The Pilot Study with CIMON is a technology demonstration project, and an observational study, that aims to obtain the first insights into the effects on crew support by an Artificial Intelligence (AI), in terms of efficiency and acceptance during long-term missions in space. Spaceflight missions put the crew under a substantial amount of stress and workload, and it is thought that AI could provide operational support to crew members.

Combustion Integrated Rack/Solid Fuel Ignition and Extinction (CIR/SoFIE): The crew gained access to the CIR combustion chamber, removed a rail segment which was causing the interference encountered earlier this week, and then successfully seated the SoFIE insert. SoFIE is a hardware insert for CIR that will enable a wide range of solid-material combustion and fire suppression studies, providing common infrastructure including sample holders, flow control, test sections, external radiant heaters, igniters, and diagnostics for multiple investigations. While SoFIE initially meets the requirements of five investigations, it is intended for use by any researchers who propose related solid combustion studies to NASA in the future.

Food Physiology: A diet briefing was attended in support of the Food Physiology investigation. The Integrated Impact of Diet on Human Immune Response, the Gut Microbiota, and Nutritional Status During Adaptation to Spaceflight (Food Physiology) experiment is designed to characterize the key effects of an enhanced spaceflight diet on immune function, the gut microbiome, and nutritional status indicators. These factors are interlinked, but diet is the only one that can be easily and meaningfully altered on Earth or during flight. This investigation aims to document the effect of dietary improvements on human physiology and the ability of those improvements to enhance adaptation to spaceflight.

Retinal Diagnostics: Using an iPad with a special retinal lens device attached, Retinal Diagnostics science sessions and follow-up questionnaires were performed. The DLR-EAC Retinal Diagnostics Study (Retinal Diagnostics) utilizes a commercially available ophthalmology lens, approved for routine clinical use with mobile devices, to capture images of the human retina in space. The videos/images are downlinked to test and train models to detect retinal pathologies common among astronauts.

Space Biofilms-2: The crew performed the fixation activity for a 24-well plate. Fixation refers to a group of techniques which are used to preserve various aspects of the samples for later analysis. The Characterization of Biofilm Formation, Growth, and Gene Expression on Different Materials and Environmental Conditions in Microgravity (Space Biofilms) investigation characterizes the mass, thickness, structure, and associated gene expression of biofilms (molds) that form in space by analyzing a fungal species grown on different materials. The experiment uses the model fungal organism Penicillium rubens. Biofilm formation can cause equipment malfunction and human illnesses and could be a serious problem on future long-term human space missions.

Systems:

Extravehicular Activity (EVA) Preparation Activities: Several activities were completed in preparation for the upcoming 3A ISS Roll Out Solar Array (IROSA) Prep EVA. A checkout of the Simplified Aid for EVA Rescue (SAFER) was performed to ensure it is functional prior to the EVA, and the Rechargeable EVA Battery Assembly (REBA) underwent a powered hardware checkout for functionality of the Helmet Lights, EVA Mobility Unit (EMU) Glove Heaters, EMU TV, HD EMU Camera, and EMU Data Recorder. EVA tools were configured, and the crew printed the EVA Cuff Checklist. The Cuff Checklist is a small book with an elastic band to allow EV crew to wear it on their wrist. The book always contains a set of pages for EMU contingency responses and pages for task-specific information to be printed and taped. The Photo TV GoPro EVA Cameras were also configured for EVA operations.

Temperature and Humidity Control (THC) Intermodule Ventilation (IMV) Flow Measurement Survey: To support monitoring of the health of the ISS IMV system, a Velocicalc device was used to take measurements of air flow exiting outlets and entering inlets throughout the USOS modules. In addition to flow rate measurements, inspections were performed in selected locations.

In Flight Maintenance (IFM) Brick Orientation: The crew performed an activity to reorient the Cobalt Bricks in the Lab out of the Keep Out Zone (KOZ). The Cobalt Bricks upstream of the HV-Server Laptops had impinged on a KOZ, and this activity shifted bricks to clear the KOZ and prepare for the upcoming H2 Sensor Tech Demo which will be installed on the rack front.

IFM Waste and Hygiene Compartment (WHC) Full Fill: ISS crewmembers performed a manual WHC flush tank fill. By using a post-flight analysis bag to capture any pressure relief, also known as the burp, they depressurized the flush water tank and water valve block to protect the dose pump. This pump is critical as it injects the pre-treat required to properly recycle waste urine.

Completed Task List Activities:

None

Today’s Ground Activities:
All activities are complete unless otherwise noted.

JEMRMS Deactivation
JEM Airlock Status Monitoring
NanoRacks External Platform Activaiton.
JEM Mode Transition from ROBO to STANDARD
MCC-H Transition to Standard Mode
SDMS Activation
Venting System Deactivation – VEDD closing
MCC-H Transition to Reboost Mode
MCC-M Transition to Standard Mode

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2106 on: 03/14/2022 05:16 pm »
Astronauts Go for Tuesday Spacewalk During CubeSat, Antigravity Suit Work

Mark Garcia Posted on March 14, 2022

Two Expedition 66 astronauts are in final preparations today for Tuesday’s spacewalk after mission managers gave the final go early Monday. NASA TV will broadcast a live briefing today at 2 p.m. EDT with International Space Station managers discussing the upcoming spacewalk activities.

The U.S. Quest airlock has been configured to host NASA Flight Engineers Kayla Barron and Raja Chari when they set their U.S. spacesuits to battery power on Tuesday at 8:05 a.m. signifying the start of a six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk. The duo will exit Quest then translate over to the Starboard-4 truss structure and install modification kits that will ready the space station for its third roll-out solar array. NASA TV, on the app and the website, will begins its live spacewalk broadcast on Tuesday at 6:30 a.m.

Barron and Chari started Monday readying their spacesuits and staging their spacewalk tools inside Quest. They were joined afterward by Flight Engineers Tom Marshburn of NASA and Matthias Maurer of ESA (European Space Agency) for a final procedures review and a conference with specialists on the ground. Marshburn and Maurer will help the spacewalkers in and out of their suits and monitor and guide them during the exterior maintenance job.

NASA Flight Engineer Mark Vande Hei focused on another upcoming external job as he set up a small satellite deployer inside the Kibo laboratory module on Monday. He placed the deployer inside Kibo’s airlock where it will be grappled by the Japanese robotic arm, placed in the vacuum of outer space, and pointed away from the station. Soon a set of CubeSats will be released into Earth orbit for a variety of educational and scientific research activities.

The two cosmonauts in the station’s Russian segment, Commander Anton Shkaplerov and Flight Engineer Pyotr Dubrov, continued studying the effectiveness of an antigravity suit that may offset the effects of living in space. Known as the lower body negative pressure suit, it has the ability to draw fluids that pool toward a crew member’s head down to the legs and feet expanding veins and tissues. This may prevent space-caused head pressure and vision issues as well as easing a human’s return to Earth’s gravity.

https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2022/03/14/astronauts-go-for-tuesday-spacewalk-during-cubesat-antigravity-suit-work/

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2107 on: 03/14/2022 05:18 pm »
Two @NASA_Astronauts are go for Tuesday's spacewalk set to start at 8:05am ET. Today at 2pm, officials talk about tomorrow's spacewalk activities live on @NASA TV.

https://twitter.com/Space_Station/status/1503411379381878784

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2108 on: 03/14/2022 05:21 pm »
The @Space_Station EXCISS study simulated the high-energy, low-gravity foundry of the early solar system. Results provide insights into how dust created by star-based processes turned into intermediate-sized particles, and then became planets and moons.

https://twitter.com/ISS_Research/status/1503408906172784644

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2109 on: 03/14/2022 06:59 pm »
Interesting comment during the NASA EVA briefing today, confirming Russian thrusters are required to maintain attitude control during Cygnus reboost.  Unclear what level of capability is needed here, and how hard it would be to replace.

https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1503455818695512074

Offline russianhalo117

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2110 on: 03/14/2022 09:20 pm »
LIVE | NASA ISS Expedition 66 Spacewalk 79 preview briefing


NOTE: Please use the agency's official social media channels when available.

Official NASA briefing via Official NASA social media channels:

« Last Edit: 03/14/2022 09:22 pm by russianhalo117 »

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2111 on: 03/15/2022 12:58 am »
Roscosmos is working on new options for operating the ISS.

Representative of Roskosmos Strugovets: the corporation is working on options for operating the ISS.

03:17 03/15/2022 (updated: 03:23 03/15/2022)

MOSCOW, March 15 - RIA Novosti. Roskosmos is working on new options for the further operation of the International Space Station (ISS), the costs of it have to be regularly reviewed, since the project is influenced by external circumstances, including non-industry ones, Dmitry Strugovets, head of the Roscosmos press service, told RIA Novosti.

Earlier Roskosmos defined new priorities in the field of space projects. In particular, the state corporation announced plans to optimize the costs of implementing the ISS project .

"Various options are being worked out for the further operation of the Russian segment of the International Space Station, including within the framework of the emerging new conditions for international cooperation," Strugovets said.

"It is worth noting that, like almost any large project, the ISS is subject to the influence of external, non-industry circumstances, so the costs of its maintenance are subject to regular review," he added.

Director General of Roscosmos Dmitry Rogozin recently announced that the state corporation will send written requests to NASA, the Canadian and European space agencies to lift illegal sanctions from its enterprises.

Later, he clarified that the letters contained proposals to initiate an internal study of the issue of lifting sanctions against Russian enterprises and to report on the decision by the end of March. After that, Russia will make a decision on the timing of the completion of our cooperation on the ISS.

https://ria.ru/20220315/mks-1778180325.html

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2112 on: 03/15/2022 01:03 am »
Independent operation of ISS Russian, US segments impossible - NASA.

NASA has received no signals from Russia about plans to change the operation of the International Space Station.

14 MAR, 16:24

NEW YORK, March 14. /TASS/. Independent operation of the Russian and American segments of the International Space Station (ISS) is impossible, they need each other to operate the station, NASA ISS Program Manager Joel Montalbano said on Monday.

"We are interdependent across the segments," he said when asked whether the segments can operate independently. "There's is no capability."

"We both need each other to operate the International Space Station," he added.

NASA has received no signals from Russia about plans to change the operation of the International Space Station and believes that work will be continues as scheduled, he said.

"And as I talked earlier, you know, the interdependency that we had between the US and the Russian segment, that is why we are able to operate and how we're operating at this time. There's no indication from our Russian partners that they want to do anything different. So, we are planning to continue operations as we are today," he said.

According to Joel Montalbano, NASA continues contacts with Russia’s state space corporation Roscosmos on the current operation of the International Space Station.

"We have a Soyuz launch this Friday and operations continue to go well at Baikonur and we're communicating with our Russian colleagues on that operation," he said. "We have on March 30 the return of a Soyuz."

"We are in communication with our Russian colleagues," he added.

https://tass.com/science/1422073

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2113 on: 03/15/2022 09:33 am »
NASA astronauts Kayla Barron and Raja Chari conduct a spacewalk at the International Space Station (ISS)


Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2114 on: 03/15/2022 09:35 am »
NASA TV is Live as Two Astronauts Prep for Station Spacewalk

Heidi Lavelle Posted on March 15, 2022

NASA Television coverage of today’s spacewalk with NASA Flight Engineers Kayla Barron and Raja Chari is now underway and is also available on the NASA app, the Space Station blog and the agency’s website.

The crew members of Expedition 66 are preparing to exit the International Space Station‘s Quest airlock for a spacewalk expected to begin at approximately 8:05 a.m. EDT and last approximately 6.5 hours.

Barron and Chari will assemble and install modification kits required for upcoming solar array upgrades. The pair will install brackets and struts to support the future installation of an ISS Roll-Out Solar Array (iROSA). So far, two of six iROSAs have been deployed on station with four additional arrays to be delivered. The arrays will ultimately augment six of the station’s eight power channels, increasing the station’s total available power from 160 kilowatts to up to 215 kilowatts.

Barron will serve as extravehicular crewmember 1 (EV 1) and will wear a suit with red stripes. Chari will serve as extravehicular crewmember 2 (EV 2) and will wear a suit with no stripes. The spacewalk will be the second of Barron’s career and the first for Chari. Astronauts Tom Marshburn and Matthias Maurer will assist the spacewalkers in and out of their spacesuits and monitor their external activities.

Astronaut roles for the Wednesday, March 23, spacewalk will be confirmed after the first spacewalk is completed.

https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2022/03/15/nasa-tv-is-live-as-two-astronauts-prep-for-station-spacewalk/

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2115 on: 03/15/2022 09:44 am »
It's EVA day! @Astro_Raja & Kayla are preparing for a full day of spacewalking. They'll spend around 6.5 hours outside, assembling and installing the modification kits required for ongoing upgrades to the @Space_Station's solar arrays..

https://twitter.com/astro_matthias/status/1503642677371453440

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2116 on: 03/15/2022 09:48 am »
.@NASA_Astronauts Kayla Barron and Raja Chari are due to begin their solar array maintenance spacewalk today at 8:05am ET live on
@NASA TV.

https://twitter.com/Space_Station/status/1503680481573097473

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2117 on: 03/15/2022 10:39 am »
U.S. Spacewalk 79 Animation - March 14, 2022


Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2118 on: 03/15/2022 11:21 am »
NASA Astronauts Begin Spacewalk to Prep for Solar Array Replacements

Heidi Lavelle Posted on March 15, 2022

Expedition 66 Flight Engineers Kayla Barron and Raja Chari of NASA began a spacewalk to assemble and install modification kits required for upcoming solar array upgrades on the International Space Station at 8:12 a.m. EDT.

Barron, designated extravehicular crew member 1 (EV1), is wearing a suit with red stripes. Chari, designated extravehicular crewmember 2 (EV 2), will wear a suit with no stripes. Coverage of the spacewalk continues on NASA Television, the NASA app, and the agency’s website.

Barron and Chari’s primary task will be to assemble and install modification kits required for upcoming solar array upgrades. The pair will install brackets and struts to support the future installation of an ISS Roll-Out Solar Array (iROSA).

https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2022/03/15/nasa-astronauts-begin-spacewalk-to-prep-for-solar-array-replacements/

Offline Rondaz

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Re: Expedition 66 Thread
« Reply #2119 on: 03/15/2022 12:13 pm »
EVA start!  Kayla Barron & @Astro_Raja have exited the space station for a 6.5-hour #spacewalk to prepare the S4 truss Mast Canister Assembly for future installation of a new @BoeingSpace ISS Roll Out Solar Array (#IROSA).

https://twitter.com/ChrisG_NSF/status/1503706853234159627

 

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