The Expedition 72 crew members have accomplished preparations for a science and upkeep spacewalk scheduled for Thursday. House agriculture, Earth observations, and lab upkeep rounded out the day for the International Space Station residents.
Commander Suni Williams and Flight Engineer Butch Wilmore, two NASA astronauts who’re scheduled to start a spacewalk at 8 a.m. EST on Thursday, have accomplished their process evaluations and spacesuit checks. In addition they joined NASA Flight Engineers Nick Hague and Don Pettit and practiced on a pc the Canadarm2 robotic arm maneuvers essential to take away radio communications {hardware}, the primary of two primary spacewalking duties. The second primary job will see the 2 spacewalkers swab websites outdoors the orbital outpost to gather samples of potential microbes for evaluation.
Hague started his day within the Kibo laboratory module making house and readying the Astrobee robotic free flyers for operations testing their capability to downlink video and imagery to mission controllers in actual time. Pettit was again on house gardening obligation processing samples and putting in analysis {hardware} for an investigation exploring how microgravity and ultraviolet radiation affect plant growth. Outcomes could allow future crews to develop crops on spacecraft for sustainment throughout long-term house missions.
The three cosmonauts working within the Roscosmos phase of the orbiting lab targeted on imaging Earth landmarks and putting in new electronics {hardware}. Flight Engineer Aleksandr Gorbunov as soon as once more arrange a camera with a spectrometer connect ed and photographed areas alongside the Mediterranean Sea in a wide range of wavelengths, together with Libya and Greece. Flight Engineers Alexey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner continued putting in new command and telemetry gear within the Zvezda service module that may talk with Soyuz and Progress spacecraft, floor stations, and orbiting satellites.
Be taught extra about station actions by following the house station weblog, @space_station and @ISS_Research on X, in addition to the ISS Facebook and ISS Instagram accounts.
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