Astronauts

Overwear the Underwear? Two months and No Complaints, Astronaut Says

July 26, 2009

Wakata Two months without changing his underwear and no complaints from his housemates, reports Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, who returns home this week after four months aboard the International Space Station.

Wakata has been wearing special undergarments dubbed “J-ware” designed for the Japanese space agency. The clothes are threaded with antibacterial and deodorizing materials.

"(For) two months I was wearing these underwear and there was no smell and nobody complained,” Wakata, speaking in Japanese, said through an interpreter during an inflight press conference Sunday.

“I think that new J-ware underwear is very good for myself and my colleagues,” he said.

Wakata is scheduled to return to Earth on Friday aboard shuttle Endeavour.

You can read more about J-ware here.

(Photo: Japan's Koichi Wakata aboard the station's Kibo laboratory. Credit: NASA) 

NASA Selects Nine New Astronauts

June 29, 2009

So what does an agent with the CIA, two Air Force officers with the Pentagon and a couple of medical doctors have in common? Apparently, NASA believes they have the mettle for future space travel.

363495main_jsc2009e140743 The agency has selected nine people to join its elite astronaut corps, though they likely won’t be flying anytime soon. The space shuttles are due to be retired next year and a replacement isn’t expected to become operational until about 2015. A few lucky souls may snag seats on the Russian Soyuz capsules, which will be ferrying space station crewmembers to and fro during the hiatus.

The Astronaut Class of 2009 is the first new hires in five years. The nine candidates are expected to report to the Johnson Space Center in Houston this summer to begin a year of basic training. At its peak, NASA added 35 astronauts to the corps (44 if you include nine astronauts from other countries that trained with the group at JSC).

Astronaut pay ranges from $59,493 annually to $130,257, in accordance to federal government pay grades, which are based on academic achievements and experience.

NASA says more than 3,500 people applied for the jobs. The new hires are:

Continue reading >

Would you make a one-way journey to Mars?

May 31, 2009

Paul Davies, director of  an Arizona State University think tank/ science research center, raises the question in an article in Astrobiology Magazine, claiming it’d be a real price-chopper.

Mars “It would be the first step to establishing a permanent human presence on another world,” writes Davies. And no, it’s not a suicide mission.

He envisions a foursome making the move, with the expectation that eventually they would be joined by others.

“This Mars base would grow and eventually become a permanent Mars colony that might take hundreds of years to establish,” Davies said.

Continue reading >

NASA scales back Orion capsule

April 29, 2009

Hoping to simplify designs and speed up development of spaceships to replace the retiring space shuttles, NASA is scaling back the number of astronauts who will be able to ride the new capsules to the International Space Station.

Oriontoiss Originally intended to carry crews of six to and from the orbiting outpost, NASA on Wednesday said it now plans to limit the number of astronauts aboard to four and fly the vehicle in the same configuration for future trips to the moon.

NASA hopes to send its first crew to the station in the new Orion capsule in 2015, but a recent review determined the agency is in danger of missing its deadline. The shuttles are being retired in 2010 when space station construction is complete.

Until the new ships are ready, the United States will have to depend on Russia for rides to space.

“We’re at a stage in the program where schedule is really king,” said Jeff Hanley, the program manger for NASA’s new exploration initiative, known as Constellation.

Hanley said NASA can make a modification later to accommodate six-member crews on Orion.

“We will need it someday, but we don’t need it early,” Hanley said.

(Artist rendering of Orion capsule approaching the space station. Credit: NASA)

 

President Tests His Space Legs

March 25, 2009

Obama astro


In his first opportunity as president to speak with a crew of shuttle astronauts in orbit, Barack Obama gathered with some members of Congress and a group of school children on Tuesday for a chat with Discovery and space station crews. He didn't tell them who their new boss was going to be -- an announcement on the permanent replacement for NASA administrator Michael Griffin is still pending -- but it was nice to see the president paying attention to space. Here is a transcript of the conversation:

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hello, Commander, can you hear us?

SPACE STATION COMMANDER MICHAEL FINCKE:  Welcome aboard the International Space Station, where we're joined with our international crew from the Space Shuttle Discovery.  Welcome aboard.  Glad to hear your voice.  We hear you loud and clear, sir.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us.  We've got a crew of wonderful schoolchildren here who are all interested in space, and we've got some members of Congress who are like big kids when it comes to talking to astronauts. 

I'm told that you're cruising at about 17,000 miles per hour, so we're glad that you are using the hands-free phone.  (Laughter.)

COMMANDER FINCKE:  Mr. President, we go around the planet once every 90 minutes.  It's quite a thrill, and it is very fast, and we see 16 sunrises and 16 sunsets every day.

THE PRESIDENT:  That is unbelievable.  Well, the first thing we want to do is just let you know how proud we are of you.  I've got to say especially, once I found out that you're from Bellwood, Illinois.

MISSION SPECIALIST SANDRA MAGNUS:  Mr. President, it was a beautiful place to grow up, and I have a lot of roots that are still there.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that's great.  We are really excited about the project that you're doing.  My understanding is, is that you are installing some additional solar panels on the space station, and that's actually going to increase the number of people that can work out of the space station, is that correct?

MISSION SPECIALIST JOHN PHILLIPS:  Sir, that's correct.  We've roughly doubled the amount of solar power available for experimentation and for supporting a larger crew, and we hope to go to a crew of six and a more aggressive experimental program this year.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, this is really exciting, because we're investing back here on the ground a whole array of solar and other renewable energy projects, and so to find out that you're doing this up at the space station is particularly exciting.

Can I ask, how exactly do you end up installing these solar panels?  What's involved?  Somebody want to give us a rundown on how you go about doing it?

MISSION SPECIALIST STEVE SWANSON:  Yes, sir.  First it comes up on a truss segment, about five feet long.  We use a robotic arm to attach it to the -- into another truss segment.  And then once that's attached and bolted on through spacewalks, then we'll go ahead and unfurl or actually deploy the solar rays in a position so that we can unfurl from inside during the commanding  with new software.

THE PRESIDENT:  About how long does it take?

MISSION SPECIALIST SWANSON:  It takes about, to put it all together, about six hours, but you actually do the commanding to actually deploy them out to their full length -- it takes about two hours.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, obviously we're really proud about the extraordinary work that our American astronauts are doing.  You are representative of the dedication and sense of adventure and discovery that we're so proud of.  But one of the things that's wonderful about this is that it is an international space station.  And I know that we have our Japanese and Russian counterparts on board, as well.  We'd love to say hello to them -- and hope that this is an example of the kind of spirit of cooperation that we can apply not just in space but here on the ground, as well.

MISSION SPECIALIST KOICHI WAKATA:  It's an honor to have a chance to talk with you, Mr. President.  We have a Russian crew member, American crew members, and I'm from Japan. And we have 50 countries working together in this wonderful international space station, as well as on the ground, in space.  And this really symbolizes the future of the scientific development of the world.  And I'm just happy to be part of this.

THE PRESIDENT:  That's wonderful.

MISSION SPECIALIST YURY LONCHKOV:  Mr. President, we work together to do everything.  It's really, really important for us.  And the American, Russian, Japanese, everybody, people, all people, work together.

THE PRESIDENT:  Now, I notice you're bouncing around quite a bit there, guys.  Are you wearing something to strap you down, or are you about to float away?

COMMANDER FINCKE:  Mr. President, we're just holding on with our toes on to some handrails below us, and at any moment we could all just easily float up.  And that's one of the fun things about flying in space; we get a chance to talk to a lot of kids and show them all the adventures that we have, flying around.  It's also -- it's not just a lot of fun, it's a little bit tough on our bodies; you have to exercise.  And so we get a chance to talk to a lot of schools while we're up here, schools all over the planet to help inspire the next generation.

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes, I hear that you're going to be talking to my alma mater, Punahou School, when you fly over Hawaii.

COMMANDER FINCKE:  We're looking forward to that, sir.

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, well, you tell them aloha. Listen, we've got a bunch of young people here.  I want to see if any of them have some questions. Anybody have a question over here?  Okay, this -- hold on, we've got a young lady right here who's got a question.

Q: As a astronaut, what do you eat?

THE PRESIDENT:  Did you hear that question?  They want to know what you guys are eating up there.

MISSION SPECIALIST RICKY ARNOLD: We're eating really well.  We eat a lot of -- it's prepared at NASA, but it's kind of like the backpacking food.  It's dehydrated, re-rehydrated, and warm it up.  We also use -- have food similar to Meals Ready to Eat that they use for the military and that a few of us ate last year when the hurricane came through Houston.

THE PRESIDENT:  Do you guys still drink Tang up there?  (Laughter.)  I've got Bill Nelson here, and he says that's been taken off the menu.  (Laughter.)  That's, by the way, before the time of you young people.  We used to drink Tang.  (Laughter.) We've got a young man right here.  Hold on one second.

Q: Can you play videogames in space?

THE PRESIDENT:  Can you play videogames in space?

MISSION SPECIALIST PHILLIPS: We can, in fact.  And in fact, a few years when I was up here for six months I had a videogame that I used to play in my spare time -- although, fortunately, we don't have much spare time.  So we can; we have a lot of laptop computers.  But for the most part we stay real busy doing our real work.

THE PRESIDENT:  So the -- tell us what kind of experiments are you doing?  Once you got the panel up, what kinds of other activities are you doing?  Is it mostly just maintaining the craft, or are there certain experiments or projects that you're engaged in, as well?

MISSION SPECIALIST MAGNUS:  Well, sir, we have experiments already up here that we've been doing for many years and we'll be able to double that with the addition of the full array that our shuttle friends brought up.  We do a lot of experiments on combustion, understanding materials, understanding how -- you know, we're guinea pigs -- so understanding how people's bodies change in space, and all this is in preparation for long-duration missions to the moon and Mars. And the exciting thing about doing science up here is we really don't know what we don't know, and that that gives you the greatest potential for learning.  And we've had a lot of cases where people have set up experiments, and we've conducted them here on the space station, only to find out that we've learned something new, something more about the fundamentals of the processes and the science.  So it's a really great place to learn a lot.

THE PRESIDENT:  Outstanding. 

Any of the young people have another question?  This young man right here?  Hold on one second.

Q: Have you found any life forms or any plants out in space?

THE PRESIDENT:  That's a good question.  Any life forms out there other than you guys?

MISSION SPECIALIST MAGNUS:  We're actually doing an experiment on this mission to take a swab or a sample of the surface of the EVA, the spacewalker's gloves both before and after the space walk.  And that's a -- that was sort of a demonstration of the type of technology that we'll be able to use on the moon and Mars for the same purpose, to try and see if we can determine what sort of bacteria or micro-organisms are living in the various environments we're going to encounter.

We unfortunately haven't really found anything here.  I think we'll have much more success at finding new types of life and different structures when we go to places like the moon and Mars and moons of Titan and these other types of environments.

THE PRESIDENT:  Excellent question.  All right, I've got a young man back here.

Q: What things did you have to study to be a astronaut?

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, that's a good question.  You guys are all extraordinarily trained.  What -- if we've got some budding astronauts over here, what should they be doing?  I'm assuming they better hit the books on science and math.

PILOT TONY ANTONELLI:  You got it just right.  The -- one of the beautiful things about getting to work here is you can study just about anything that you're really interested in -- science and math being a big part of it.  But we have medical doctors, geologists, engineers, and physicists in the group here with us.  So it's pretty much anything in the math and science field.   We've got a couple of schoolteachers here with us studying education, as well as the math and science.

But there really is room up here for everybody.  The important part, though, is to work really hard and do well in school.  It will make a difference in your future.

THE PRESIDENT:  And what about -- what about fitness requirements these days?  Some of us remember watching The Right Stuff, where -- that's pretty impressive.  (Laughter.)  Is there a particular requirement --

SHUTTLE COMMANDER LEE ARCHAMBAULT:  Well, Mr. President, the fitness requirements are still --

THE PRESIDENT:  Go ahead, I'm sorry.

COMMANDER ARCHAMBAULT:  Mr. President, the fitness requirements are still there.  As a matter of fact, the International Space Station just recently incorporated a new fitness machine.  It's a very, very fancy workout machine seen in a gym, but it's called the ARED, and we can do a lot of good exercises on it, the leg -- strength training for your legs, as well as your upper body.  So, particularly for the long duration folks, it's very important to maintain your muscles in good tone and to help you readapt when you get back on planet Earth. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Excellent.  Okay, there's -- a young lady back here had a question.

Q: When you say you "exercise," what do you do?

MISSION SPECIALIST JOE ACABA:  Well, we have a couple of different exercise machines up here.  On the space shuttle we brought up a -- it looks like a -- the bicycle that you would find in a gymnasium.  So we can use that.  And they have one here on the space station. And the other machine, you can do all kinds of stuff.  You can do squats, you can do curls.  We have a lot we can do.  We also have a treadmill, so you can go ahead and run up here in space.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, we've got another question from a young man.  Hold on.     

Q: Do you know how many stars there are in space?

THE PRESIDENT:  Asking how many stars in space.  I'll be interested in hearing the answer to this one.  (Laughter.)

COMMANDER FINCKE:  Aboard the International Space Station, we can look down and see our beautiful planet Earth, and we can also look up and see the rest of the cosmos.  And we can see that there are so many stars out there that it's very hard to count them all.  And we can see that our Earth is a very small -- very small planet in such a big universe.  And it's just really amazing, because it gives us a deep perspective of -- we have to really take good care of our own planet -- and that our own planet is just a -- is a small place, and we have the whole rest of the universe to work together in an international sense and go explore this whole universe that's in front of us, and all the discoveries that we'll make together.

So maybe we'll someday be able to count how many stars that we have, because we're starting to go to -- go to the stars as human beings together.  And that's what's really exciting about serving aboard the International Space Station and flying up and down on space shuttles, is that we're part of that great adventure. And we need you kids to study hard, because we can't do it all by ourselves.  We really need you guys to work hard, and do whatever you're supposed to do, and do it well, like Tony said, because there's a whole universe in front of us.

THE PRESIDENT:  I had a quick question.  Does weightlessness have an impact in terms of your ability to sleep?

MISSION SPECIALIST ARNOLD:  Sir, we just arrived here, just a few days ago, and it's taken a while to get used to -- for me, personally, missing a pillow.  You're used to laying down on a mattress and having a place to rest your head.  So it's taken a while to get used to that.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I know the kids got a chance to ask some questions.  I want to make sure that if there are any members of Congress who've got some questions that they're interested in, that they've got a chance, too. 

Okay, hold on.  This is Kay Bailey Hutchison from Texas.

SENATOR HUTCHISON:  I understand that you are doing experiments on salmonella, and watching those organisms, and how they react and grow.  And we've had some salmonella problems here on Earth.  What do you think you will be able to learn from the environment in space that maybe you couldn't learn here on Earth?

MISSION SPECIALIST PHILLIPS: I'm actually going to have a bit of a hard time answering that question.  We do, indeed, have an experiment called the National Laboratory Program experiment, in which salmonella are -- in which certain micro-organisms are exposed to salmonella.  My job as an astronaut was basically to turn the crank and activate the experiment.  Then after about four or five days, I turn the crank again and deactivate it.

I'm not exactly sure what the scientists are going to do with the data back at home or with the samples.  We are returning, however, eight big vials of samples of these cultures of micro-organisms and salmonella, and let the scientists go to work.

THE PRESIDENT:  Does Bill Nelson -- he knows a little something about this stuff.

SENATOR NELSON:  Hey, guys, I wish I were up there with you.  You are just getting to the point where it's really looking like a full-up national laboratory where we can really do the experimentation.  When will you have it full-up, ready to go, where we can then reap the results of that $100 billion investment?

COMMANDER FINCKE:  It's nice to hear you again, sir.  The International Space Station has already been delivering some of the science we've promised.  Where are now is -- and Expedition 18, our crew, is we're making the turn from three people to six people.  The next crew that comes after us, a few months after we get replaced will have six people onboard the International Space Station.  So that's why we needed the solar power, that's why we needed the second toilet and other things, so that we'd have room and facilities for six people.

And once we have six people, we'll have enough time and energy -- solar power, I mean -- to run all the experiments that we can.  And then it's just a matter of getting enough experiments up and down from the space station to really reap on that science.  We've already been delivering and we've got a lot more to come.  And like Sandy said, there's a lot of things we don't know, so there's some really interesting discoveries out in front of us.

THE PRESIDENT:  Do any of the young people have any more questions?  Hold on one second, we've got one here.

Q: Do you love doing your job?

THE PRESIDENT:  They asked if you love doing your job.

MISSION SPECIALIST WAKATA:  Yes, it's wonderful to work in space.  Ever since I saw Apollo VII, the lunar landing, when I was five years old, I always longed for going to space and work.  And here the dream came true.  I had to study hard and worked hard, but I'm so happy to be here and I'm loving living here and working with so many wonderful people here.

THE PRESIDENT:  Just a couple of logistical questions.  How long did it take -- from the time of launch, how long does it take to get to the space station?

COMMANDER ARCHAMBAULT:  Well, Mr. President, let me answer that in two ways.  First of all, it takes up about eight and a half minutes to get to orbit, and at that time we're going 17,500 miles an hour.  But we're in a bit of a tail chase with the space station, and it's approximately about a day and a half to two days later that we actually rejoin with the space station.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, so eight minutes just to get into orbit, but then you've got to basically try to catch up with the space station and match up so that you can lock in.

COMMANDER ARCHAMBAULT:  Sir, that's exactly right.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay. Anybody have any more questions?  Hold on one second.

Q: What's your favorite or the most interesting experiment you're working on up at the space station?

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, do you guys have a favorite experiment right now?

MISSION SPECIALIST MAGNUS:  That's a really tough question, because they're all interesting in different ways.  Mike and I were doing a flame experiment where we're  trying to help the scientists on the ground understand how fire behaves up here -- there's all kinds of reason for that.  So that was interesting because it's sort of an unusual environment to intentionally put a fire.

I think one of the ones I like the most is an experiment that we're doing on ourselves to try and understand how our nutritional state changes and our biochemistry changes, and that will help us design food and understand a little bit more about the processes that the human body undergoes.  That's probably my favorite one.  But there's all kinds of interesting things in all of the experiments.

 THE PRESIDENT:  Now, can I ask you a question?  Were you tempted to cut your hair shorter while you were up there, or do you -- is it fun in weightlessness?  (Laughter.)

 MISSION SPECIALIST MAGNUS:  Well, that's a really good question, because it is a little bit of -- to take care of long hair in here.  I think ideally a short haircut is the way to go, but quite frankly, on me it wouldn't be so nice, so I kept it long.

 THE PRESIDENT:  I think it's a real fashion statement.  (Laughter.) 

Hold on one second, we've got another young man back here.

Q: How much spare time do you have on the day -- in the day?

THE PRESIDENT:  How much spare time do you have?  It sounds like you guys are pretty busy.

MISSION SPECIALIST ACABA:  They do keep us pretty busy up here and we have a very tight schedule that starts from the moment you wake up until the moment you go to sleep.  But they give us a little bit of time in the morning to get yourself ready, get yourself cleaned up, have some breakfast.  And the same in the evening.  So we can use that time to either call down to our family and friends, or maybe even check our email and see how things are going back on Earth.

THE PRESIDENT:  Now, that's interesting.  Does email work pretty much the same between the space station and computers here on Earth?

COMMANDER FINCKE:  Mr. President, as just about everybody on the planet knows, is that email is a pretty important way for us to keep in touch with each other.  Even though we're really far away and traveling really fast, we still use email also.  Unfortunately, we only synchronize our email once or twice a day, sometimes three times a day.  So it's not as fast and instantaneous as we are used to on the ground, but even so, it's a really useful way to get in touch with other people.

In addition, we have kind of an Internet -- voice-over Internet protocol telephone, so it's really nice that we can get the a chance to talk to our families -- not 24/7, but when we do have good satellite coverage we do get the chance to call home.  And that's -- for those of us who stay up for a long time, that's really important to us.

THE PRESIDENT:  Excellent.  All right, well, I know that you guys probably have a whole bunch of stuff to do, but I think that we may have one more question from a member of Congress.  Hold on one second.

REPRESENTATIVE KOSMAS:  Thank you very much.  My name is Suzanne Kosmas, and I actually represent central Florida, the area that includes the Kennedy Space Center. So I want to first thank you on behalf of all Americans for your service to us and for what you represent in terms of America and our supremacy in space exploration, along with our international partners, and for what you're doing there at the International Space Station. I had the honor of being at the Kennedy Space Center last week when you took off and it was a fabulous, absolutely fantastic launch.  And we -- so I wished you adieu from there, and now I'm wishing you hello from here. 

I want to thank you again for your service, and tell you how excited I am to be representing the Kennedy Space Station and that area, but also for what you do that inspires people to be interested in the science and technology that has led us to this pioneering place where you are.  And the things that we anticipate that we will be able to reap from your service I'm very thrilled about, particularly the idea, as the President has said, of alternative energy and the fact that you're using solar panels in space -- what we're hoping in the long run that you will be able to, from space, use solar energy to come back to Earth. 

And again, I'm thrilled to be here and very excited to have the opportunity to talk to you.  And thank you so much for your service to our country.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that all of us echo --

COMMANDER ARCHAMBAULT:  Thank you, ma'am, we appreciate that.  And each one of us here is very lucky and honored to be right where we're at here today, so the honor is all ours.  We're honored to be here doing this great work.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think all of us echo the sentiment.  We are extraordinarily proud of you.  We're so grateful that you took the time to speak to all of us.  I know these young people are pretty excited to be on a direct link with astronauts in space.

So does everybody want to say good-bye?

AUDIENCE:  Good-bye --

THE PRESIDENT:  All right.  They're all beaming.  And we appreciate you guys -- so look forward to seeing you when you're back on the ground.  God bless you.

COMMANDER ARCHAMBAULT:  Thank you, Mr. President.  And on behalf of the Space Shuttle Discovery crew here in the dark blue shirts, I want to say we're very honored that you spent some time with us today.  It meant a lot to us.  We thank you very much. And from one  Chicago guy to another, I wish you well, sir.  And for closing comments, I'll pass the microphone off to Commander Mike Fincke, Commander of the International Space Station.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you. 

COMMANDER FINCKE:  Mr. President, I'm not from Chicago -- I'm sorry about that.  But my crew and I are really happy to have a chance to talk to you and share our adventure with even more people.  It's pretty impressive what human beings can do when we work together constructively, and not destructively.  And that's the mission of the International Space Station. So thanks for joining us.  Thanks for flying with us at 17,500 miles an hour today.  We're glad to have a chance to share it with you and the distinguished members from Congress, as well as all the kids out there. So, everybody, thanks again for joining us. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, guys.  Bye-bye.  

(Photo: White House)


How Do You Go To the Bathroom in Space? Carefully

March 18, 2009

Leave it to a teacher to tell you the straight poop. 


Here's what rookie astronaut Joe Acaba, a former teacher,  had to say about toileting it in orbit.

"In the space shuttle we have a small room where we have our toilet and there’s a device to collect the urine and then you have another one to dispose of the larger matter. Basically a lot of it works on a vacuum, so we have a hose but it’s a very light vacuum and each person has their own funnel (for) when you have to go ahead and urinate.

When you go ahead to do No. 2, just like you do at home, you sit down, you make sure you have a good seal and that’s important. The last thing we want to have is our commander seeing something floating around the cabin.”

Thanks Joe. Quite a visual ....

 

 


A Space Toast

November 27, 2008

The shuttle Endeavour astronauts are not the first to spend Thanksgiving in orbit. But they are the first to toast the day -- then sip their drink from a cup.

Toast

Astronaut Don Pettit concocted the contraptions from sheets of transparent plastic folded into the shape of an airplane wing and taped. Liquids adhere to the sides of the plastic due to surface tension, the same phenomena by which spacecraft engines draw fuel in zero gravity. Unrestrained, weightlessness causes liquids to float around in spherical blobs.

In a video beamed down to flight controllers and aired on NASA TV, Pettit and crewmate Stephen Bowen drank tea from their new zero-gravity cups, toasting to Thanksgiving, space exploration and “just because we’re in space and we can.”

“We can sip most of the fluid out of these cups and we no longer have to drink our beverages sucking through a straw in a pouch,” Pettit said.

So, thanks to the Endeavour crew, which installed a water purification system aboard the International Space Station last week, future space travelers may be drinking recycled urine, but at least they can do with a touch of class.

Tool Bag Tracker

November 24, 2008

The $100,000 bag of tools that got away from astronauts Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and Stephen Bowen during the first spacewalk of shuttle Endeavour's home-makeover mission at the space station is back in the news -- for better or worse.

Bad news first, and I use the term "news" loosely: An enterprising judgment-challenged entrepreneur claims to have found Heide's tool bag on a golf course in Minnesota -- quite the coincidence considering that's Heide's home state. Well, you've probably figured this was coming, but said "tool bag" is up for sale on eBay. Here's a tip: It's a scam.

The real tool bag is still traveling around the Earth. The good news part of this tale comes from another enterprising soul who put together this flying tool kit tracker to chart its progress.

Update: Surprise, surprise. eBay pulled the auction. Fortuitously, NASAWatch stored a screengrab.

Slippery Space

November 18, 2008

Two of the shuttle Endeavour astronauts are working outside the International Space Station today, in the first of four spacewalks planned for the mission. 290772main_425x321
Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and Stephen Bowen got off to an early start, slipping through hatch of the station’s Quest airlock more than 30 minutes ahead of schedule.

They hustled through a few early tasks to pack up an empty nitrogen tank for transport back to Earth and remove an insulation blanket from a window in Japan’s Kibo module before moving on to the primary goal of their spacewalk: cleaning up a contaminated rotary joint in the station’s truss. The joint is needed to position solar wing panels toward the sun so they can collect as much light as possible to produce electricity.

Things started to unravel when Stefanyshyn-Piper gathered her tools for the job. She found one of her grease guns had lost its cap and had leaked grease inside its bag. When she reached inside, the grease got all over her gloves.

"I think we had a grease gun explode in the large bag," she told flight controllers at NASA’s Mission Control Cener in Houston. “There's grease in the bag."
She tried cleaning off the goop with a dry wipe -- without much luck. Then her tool bag floated away.

“Oh, great!” said Stefanyshyn-Piper, a veteran of two previous spacewalks. “I guess one of my … bags was not tethered and it’s loose … See it?"

“Yeah, we see it," replied astronaut Shane Kimbrough, who was overseeing the spacewalk from aboard Endeavour.

Television cameras showed the bag floating off into space. In addition to the leaky grease gun, the bag held a second grease gun, scrapers, wipes, trash bags and other equipment needed to clean and lubricate the rotary joint.

All was not lost, however. A duplicate set of gear was stashed inside her partner’s tool bag.

Three more spacewalks are planned during Endeavour’s flight to work on the rotary joint.

(Credit: NASA TV)

Space Shuttle Ready to Fly

November 14, 2008

It’s been a quiet day at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida where NASA is preparing to launch space shuttle Endeavour and seven astronauts on a mission to upgrade the International Space Station for a crew of six.153212main_126walkout
Most of the attention has fallen on a water recycling system that will enable the crew to purify their urine and other wastewater so that it can be used for drinking water.

As astronaut Don Pettit, a former space station resident flying as a mission specialist on Endeavour puts it, “It will make yesterday's coffee into today's coffee … It's one of these great circle-of-life things.”

Adds crewmate Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper, “Some people may think it's downright disgusting, but if it's done correctly, you process water that's purer than what you drink here on Earth.”

You can read about the purification technique here and decide for yourself.

So far, no glitches on the road to launch -- aside from the fact that it’s been a while. NASA’s last shuttle took off on May 31. Last month’s planned mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope was rescheduled for next year.

Liftoff is set for 7:55 p.m. EST. Check back for updates.

(Shuttle crew heads to the launch pad. Credit: NASA)
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Irene Klotz Discovery News space correspondent Irene Klotz chronicles humanity's efforts to leave the planet. One day, she wants to see for herself what all the fuss is about.


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