Astronauts Luca Parmitano and Chris Cassidy switched their spacesuits to battery power and began their spacewalk outside the International Space Station on 9 July, 2013.
The sortie was planned for six and half hours, but the astronauts proceeded faster than planned and had time for extra ‘get-ahead’ tasks, routing cables and staging equipment to help future spacewalkers. The final duration of Tuesday’s extravehicular activity was 6 hours and 7 minutes.
The primary goals were to replace a Ku-band communications transceiver, retrieve two science experiments that exposed material samples to space, install cables for Russia’s coming Nauka laboratory module, and carry out routine maintenance. Nauka will replace the Pirs module currently attached to the Station.
The highlight of the spacewalk for Luca was surely riding on the platform at the end of the Station’s Canadarm2 robot arm.
Operated by Karen Nyberg inside the Station, the arm moved Luca to the port side of the Station’s long central truss to remove a failed camera that will be returned to Earth for analysis.
Finally, Luca installed a multilayer insulation cover to protect the docking interface of the Pressurized Mating Adapter-2 on the Harmony module.
Discussion: one comment
Dai Luca!!!
Spero che la tua missione serva anche a far sbiadire lo spettacolo indecente che gli uomini pubblici italiani danno al mondo intero.
Siamo un popolo che ha avuto sempre grandi uomini nella sua storia e tu ora sei diventato parte di essa!
Siamo tutti con te!
Mario.