Suggested Searches

Space Station

Viewing Posts from January 2015

View All Posts

    Pair of Space Freighters Packed for Departure

    NASA and ESA Astronauts

    A pair of docked space freighters is being loaded in preparation for next month’s departure activities. The ISS Progress 57 (57P) resupply ship is being packed with trash and discarded gear for a fiery disposal over the Pacific Ocean. The SpaceX Dragon commercial cargo craft is being loaded with experiment samples, spacesuit gear and other …

    Read Full Post

    Robonaut’s Legs Powered Up, Station Lowers Orbit

    NASA and ESA Astronauts

    The Expedition 42 crew worked Wednesday with fruit flies, a humanoid robot and a Dragon spacecraft. Also, Europe’s Automated Transfer Vehicle-5 fired its engines for nearly five minutes, slightly lowering the station’s orbit to prepare for an upcoming ISS Progress 58 resupply mission. Commander Barry Wilmore and Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti packed gear inside the …

    Read Full Post

    Virts and Wilmore Preparing for Trio of Spacewalks

    Commander Barry Wilmore

    NASA astronauts Terry Virts and Barry Wilmore are getting a pair of U.S. spacesuits ready for a set of spacewalks beginning in February. Throughout Tuesday in the Quest airlock, they recharged suit batteries and checked out fans and other suit components. Virts also joined Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti transferring cargo to and from the SpaceX …

    Read Full Post

    Crew Studying Tiny Organisms to Understand Larger Organisms

    Terry Virts and Alexander Samokutyaev

    After a week of medical science activities, the space station residents began the new week focusing on worms, fruit flies and plants. The tiny organisms provide scientists a model for larger organisms and how microgravity affects such things as immunity, muscles and bones. › Read more about the Epigenetics experiment › Read more about the …

    Read Full Post

    CATS Installed, Eye Checks and Science Maintenance for Crew

    Samantha Cristoforetti and Barry Wilmore

    With CATS successfully installed to an external platform on Japan’s Kibo laboratory, the Expedition 42 crew spent Friday working life science, combustion and a variety of other experiments. › Read more about CATS The Combustion Integrated Rack (CIR), located inside the Destiny lab module, needs fuel so scientists can ignite materials to study the behavior …

    Read Full Post

    Robotic Arms Move CATS While Crew Studies Life Science

    Kibo and CATS Installation

    Ground controllers overnight remotely guided the Canadarm2, with its Dextre robotic hand attached, to deftly remove the CATS experiment from the SpaceX Dragon trunk. They then handed it off to the Japanese robotic arm for installation on the Kibo laboratory’s external platform. CATS, or Cloud-Aerosol Transport System, will collect data on the pollution, dust, smoke, …

    Read Full Post

    Crew Works Botany and Physics as Robotic Arm Preps New Experiment

    Kibo Laboratory

    The six-member Expedition 42 crew worked Dragon cargo transfers and science on the International Space Station Wednesday. Commander Barry Wilmore conducted botany research and harvested plants grown for the Advanced Plant Experiments-03-1 (APEX-03-1). The thale cress plants are photographed and preserved in a science freezer for analysis on the ground. › Read more about APEX-03-1 …

    Read Full Post

    Specialists Discuss Spacesuit Work, Crew Investigates ATV Odor

    Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti

    Ground controllers have completed troubleshooting work after last week’s false alarm indicating an ammonia leak. Heat exchangers and thermal control systems on the U.S. side of the International Space Station have been recovered and reintegrated and are operating in excellent shape. Commander Barry Wilmore was scrubbing cooling loops on a U.S. spacesuit when he heard …

    Read Full Post

    Crew Back at Work Studying Immune System in Space

    Astronaut Terry Virts

    The International Space Station residents were back at work Thursday after an ammonia leak indication sent the crew over to the Russian segment. Flight controllers determined there was no leak and NASA managers allowed the crew to resume normal activities and open the U.S. segment back up. This week, the orbital residents kicked off several …

    Read Full Post

    Astronauts Back in Station’s U.S. Segment

    Astronauts wearing protective masks

    The crew opened the hatch to the U.S. segment and returned inside at 2:05 p.m. Central time. Wearing protective masks, Virts and Cristoforetti sampled the cabin atmosphere and reported no indications of any ammonia.

    Read Full Post