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  • ISS REPORTS 2004
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    INFORMATIE
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  • International Space Station Status Report #04-2
    5:30 p.m. CST Friday, January 9, 2004
    Expedition 8 Crew

    Expedition 8 Commander Mike Foale celebrated his 47th birthday
    on Wednesday this week while Flight Engineer Alexander Kaleri
    observed the Russian Orthodox Christmas on Thursday as they both
    continued research work, performed several maintenance activities
    and conducted troubleshooting efforts to assist ground engineers
    analyzing a small decay in the Station cabin�s atmospheric
    pressure.

    The pressure decay poses no threat to the crew's safety or to
    the continued operation of the Station and its systems, but
    Russian and U.S. engineers are conducting a thorough
    investigation of the decrease, which appears to have begun about
    Dec. 22. The decline occurs at a rate so small, only a few
    hundredths of a pound per square inch (psi) of pressure per day,
    that it is difficult to detect.

    This week, Foale and Kaleri checked a variety of valves and
    seals throughout the Station using an ultrasonic leak detection
    system and found no leaks. Today, Kaleri checked a Russian
    system, called Vozdukh, that removes carbon dioxide from the
    cabin as well as several other Russian systems for leaks and
    found none.

    To continue the effort to diagnose the source of the pressure
    decay, flight controllers in Russia and the U.S. plan to ask the
    crew to shut off portions of the Station periodically in coming
    days. In the next few days, hatches will be closed for periods
    ranging between 12-24 hours to seal off various modules to check
    if any element within them could be the source of a leak. Those
    modules may include the Progress cargo vehicle, the Pirs Docking
    Compartment and Soyuz spacecraft, and the Quest airlock.

    If those steps do not detect the source of the leak, then the
    crew may be asked to move into the Russian living quarters module
    for several days and shut hatches separating the Russian living
    quarters and other modules from the rest of the station for
    several days. Those actions would likely not take place any
    earlier than Wednesday. Engineers are continuing to work on
    potential plans for those steps to diagnose the leak and to
    review the number of hatches that would be closed at that time.

    The decay in pressure over the past few weeks aboard the station
    has amounted to a decrease from the normal pressure of 14.7 psi,
    a pressure equivalent to sea level on Earth, to a pressure today
    of about 14 psi, a pressure equivalent to the normal air pressure
    in Oklahoma City. The changes in pressure do not present a
    concern for the health of the crew. Also, plentiful supplies of
    air, oxygen and nitrogen, are aboard the station -- enough that
    the current rate of decay could be sustained for six months
    without further supplies aboard if required. However, engineers
    are confident they will identify and correct the source of the
    decay as they continue the diagnostic work onboard.

    Flight controllers may feed more nitrogen into the Station
    atmosphere late Sunday or Monday to increase the overall air
    pressure and maintain the cabin atmosphere in the optimal range
    for the operation of equipment aboard the complex. Russian flight
    controllers also are continuing to evaluate the possible
    replacement of parts of the Station's oxygen-generating Elektron
    system. The Russian system generates oxygen by recycling
    wastewater aboard the complex. It has failed, but spare parts are
    aboard that engineers are confident can bring it back to full
    operation and they are developing plans to perform that work
    possibly next week. While the Elektron failure is being
    evaluated, the crew has used Solid Fuel Oxygen Generators,
    canisters that are heated to produce oxygen, to replenish oxygen
    on the Station.

    Despite the leak detection activities, engineers are not certain
    the fluctuation and slight decline in pressure aboard the Station
    is the result of a leak from the complex. Evaluations continue to
    determine if it instead could result from or be significantly
    contributed to by troubleshooting and intermittent Elektron
    operation, SFOG oxygen generation activities, recent changes in
    temperature and sun angles, the accuracy of various pressure
    measuring systems, or other factors.

    Information on the crew's activities aboard the Space Station,
    future launch dates, as well as Station sighting opportunities
    from anywhere on the Earth, is available on the Internet at:

    http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/

    Details on Station science operations can be found on an
    Internet site administered by the Payload Operations Center at
    NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., at:

    http://scipoc.msfc.nasa.gov/

    The next ISS status report will next week as events warrant.

    -end-

    ISS Space Station Status

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    Afstand: km
    Hoogte: km
    Snelheid:0 km/h

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