New science experiments and analysis samples delivered aboard the SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft on Tuesday are being put in at present aboard the International Space Station. In the meantime, extra science and lab upkeep continued making certain the maintenance of the orbital outpost.
The 4 NASA astronauts representing the Expedition 72 crew, Flight Engineers Don Pettit, Nick Hague, and Butch Wilmore, and Commander Suni Williams, spent the day unloading the research-packed Dragon that arrived on Tuesday, Nov. 5. The quartet shortly transferred the superior analysis {hardware} and temperature-sensitive specimens into the area station and put in them into analysis racks and chilly storage.
Pettit entered Dragon and eliminated new area biology {hardware} to discover space-caused irritation modifications then put in it contained in the Kibo laboratory module for activation. Hague partnered along with Wilmore and disconnected Dragon’s portable science freezers containing essential science samples then put in them in station EXPRESS racks for upcoming processing and evaluation. Williams additionally participated within the Dragon science {hardware} transfers earlier than becoming a member of Wilmore to unpack frozen research sample bags for stowage in quite a lot of station science freezers.
The area station’s three cosmonauts, Alexey Ovchinin, Ivan Vagner, and Aleksandr Gorbunov, spent Wednesday on their process record of Roscosmos science experiments and lab upkeep.
Ovchinin and Vagner labored collectively all through the day within the Zvezda service module organising an X-ray spectrometer that was delivered aboard the Progress 89 resupply ship on Aug. 17. The duo put in cables and electronics parts to help the astrophysics statement research that can be put in outdoors the orbital lab on a later date. Gorbunov closed out an experimental session observing Earth’s nighttime environment in near-ultraviolet wavelengths then spent the remainder of his shift servicing electronics and life help methods.
Study extra about station actions by following the area station weblog, @space_station and @ISS_Research on X, in addition to the ISS Facebook and ISS Instagram accounts.
Get the newest from NASA delivered each week. Subscribe right here: www.nasa.gov/subscribe