Onafhankelijk Ruimtevaart en Technologie Centrum /-^-\ SPACE.Cweb.NL
Mission Reports
Het laatste nieuws
  • Laatste Nieuws
  • Populair Nieuws
  • Spacestation ISS
  • Shuttle Nieuws
  • Space Specials
  • Satelliet Nieuws
  • Planeten Nieuws
  • Universum Nieuws
  • Amateur Satelliet
  • Onderwijs / Studie
  • Wetenschap/Onderz.
  • Evenementen
  • Lanceringen
  • China ruimtevaart
  • UFO en Mysteries
  • Space Columns
  • Live NASA TV

    Follow spacecweb on Twitter

  • ISS REPORTS 2004
     » 24 Sep 2004 #53
     » 17 Sep 2004 #52
     » 10 Sep 2004 #51
     » 03 Sep 2004 #50
     » 27 Aug 2004 #49
     » 20 Aug 2004 #48
     » 14 Aug 2004 #47
     » 13 Aug 2004 #46
     » 11 Aug 2004 #45
     » 06 Aug 2004 #44
     » 03 Aug 2004 #43
     » 30 Jul 2004 #42
     » 23 Jul 2004 #41
     » 16 Jul 2004 #40
     » 09 Jul 2004 #39
     » 02 Jul 2004 #38
     » 01 Jul 2004 #37
     » 30 Jun 2004 #36
     » 29 Jun 2004 #35
     » 25 Jun 2004 #34
     » 25 Jun 2004 #33
     » 24 Jun 2004 #32
     » 18 Jun 2004 #31
     » 10 Jun 2004 #30
     » 04 Jun 2004 #29
     » 27 May 2004 #28
     » 25 May 2004 #27
     » 21 May 2004 #26
     » 14 May 2004 #25
     » 07 May 2004 #24
     » 29 Apr 2004 #23
     » 23 Apr 2004 #22
     » 21 Apr 2004 #21
     » 18 Apr 2004 #20
     » 16 Apr 2004 #19
     » 09 Apr 2004 #18
     » 02 Apr 2004 #17
     » 05 Mrt 2004 #16
     » 19 Mrt 2004 #14A
     » 19 Mrt 2004 #14
     » 12 Mrt 2004 #13
     » 05 Mrt 2004 #12
     » 26 Feb 2004 #11
     » 20 Feb 2004 #10
     » 13 Feb 2004 #09
     » 06 Feb 2004 #08
     » 31 Jan 2004 #07
     » 29 Jan 2004 #06
     » 23 Jan 2004 #05
     » 16 Jan 2004 #04
     » 12 Jan 2004 #03
     » 09 Jan 2004 #02
     » 02 Jan 2004 #01
    INFORMATIE
  • Over Ons...
  • Add Favorite
  • International Space Station Status Report #04-34
    4 p.m. CDT, Friday, June 25, 2004
    Expedition 9 Crew

    Specialists in Moscow today continued to analyze the cause of an
    unexpectedly high rate of pressure loss in the primary oxygen
    bottle on Astronaut Mike Fincke�s Russian space suit, which
    terminated Thursday�s spacewalk after 14 minutes.

    Planners have retargeted the Extravehicular Activity (EVA) for
    no earlier than Tuesday, June 29, based on Russian ground station
    communication coverage. The date of the spacewalk is expected to
    be confirmed Tuesday following the next meeting of the
    International Space Station�s (ISS) Mission Management Team.

    Almost immediately after switching their Orlan spacesuits to
    internal power and opening the Pirs Docking Compartment hatch to
    start the EVA, Fincke and Expedition 9 Commander Gennady Padalka
    were told to terminate the spacewalk and begin troubleshooting
    efforts to determine the cause of the pressure loss in the
    primary oxygen tank on Fincke�s suit.

    Once the ISS was reconfigured for normal operations, the
    troubleshooting began, which stretched into today with additional
    evaluations focusing on an injector switch that increases the
    flow of oxygen into the Orlan spacesuit. The crew cycled the
    switch on and off several times, while observing the suit
    injector system�s status light.

    Though investigation into the cause of the injector switch
    problem will continue throughout the weekend, Russian flight
    controllers assured the crew that its procedures were executed
    properly and it could expect to use the same suits when the
    spacewalk is rescheduled.

    The objective of the spacewalk is to restore power to Control
    Moment Gyroscope (CMG) #2 by replacing a Remote Power Controller
    Module (RPCM). CMG #2 was taken off line April 21 by a failure of
    a circuit breaker in the RPCM. Currently, because of the failure
    of CMG #1 about two years ago, the attitude of the Station is
    being adequately controlled by the two remaining CMGs.

    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 be issued as events warrant.