During yesterday’s repair session, the astronauts had a bit
of trouble with their activity. Astronaut Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper lost her
grip on the tool bag used to clean the space station’s damaged rotary joint.
While working on the cranky joint, she noticed that one of
the two grease guns exploded, covering her gloves and her camera with the
substance. She began cleaning and for a few seconds lost track of the tool bag
which began floating away and reached the back of the station. Aside from the
two grease guns, inside the bag were some scrapers, wipes, bearing assemblies and
other pieces of equipment.
Fellow spacewalker Stephen Bowen assisted Stefanyshyn-Piper with
his set of tools and they managed to complete the assigned tasks after a period
of about seven hours.
These floating tools represent a great concern for NASA and
the Air Force, as they represent a collision threat for the shuttles, the space
station and the satellites.
At this point it is
not clear whether the mishap will have a significant impact on the other three spacewalks
scheduled for the days to come. The tasks are focused on fixing one of the two
joints that rotate the space station's giant solar wings, which has been acting
up and for the past few months limited the device’s ability to track the sun
and generate power at its maximum ability. The two astronauts have to clean off
the metal debris by using terry-cloth mitts and also lubricate all the pieces
with a special grease designed to handle the extreme temperatures of space.
So far, they managed to replace the first two of the 11 sets
of bearing assemblies and even though the tool bag was lost, the spacewalk was
considered a success. "We were running well ahead of time going into the
beginning of the SARJ (solar alpha rotary joint) work," said spacewalk
officer John Ray.
"In spite of our little hiccup there -- or major hiccup
-- I think we did a good job out there," Stefanyshyn-Piper said.
"Houston concurs," flight communicator Mark Vande Hei
said from the Johnson Space Center. "You all were champs. You rolled with
the punches, and made it all happen ahead of the timeline."
The tasks will continue tomorrow, with the astronauts
looking to lubricate the station’s left rotary joint, which even though works
fine, must be looked at prevent future damage.
"We've got spares of everything we can replace for the
other EVAs except for the grease guns. But we've got some options we're looking
into and some folks are working on that right now," explained Mr. Ray.
NASA’s plans for next year include the transport of a new
gear ring, which will replace the damaged one. The installation process will
demand at least 10 more spacewalks and the preparations have already begun.
The space station is now equipped with a new water recycling
gear, a new toilet and also crew sleep stations, ensuring an environment which
from now on will be able to house up to six astronauts.