Computer failure plagues International Space Station
Saturday, June 16, 2007
SPACEWALKING astronauts aim to repair a damaged thermal blanket on the space shuttle Atlantis yesterday as US and Russian controllers struggle with a worrying computer failure on the International Space Station.
James Reilly and John "Danny" Olivas are scheduled to begin the third spacewalk of the current mission of the shuttle to the space station.
The spacewalkers' first scheduled task will be to repair a bit of protruding insulation near the rear of the shuttle. A corner of the thermal blanket tore loose during Atlantis' launch last Friday, potentially exposing inner layers of the shuttle's surface to superheated gases on re-entry.
Another pressing issue is the failure of the Russian computers aboard the US$100 billion space station, which emerged last Wednesday shortly after the installation of a solar wing panel that was brought to the station by the space shuttle.
The Russian computers control a critical part of the space station's navigation system.
"The new power feed to the Russian segment could be the problem," International Space Station programme manager Mike Suffredini told a news briefing at the Johnson Space Centre late last Thursday.
Suffredini said the Russians would try to reboot the system when the station passed over Russian ground stations yesterday during its orbits around the Earth.
The two Russian cosmonauts aboard will work on the problem with their controllers on the ground through the wee hours of the morning.
Nasa has said a failure to resolve the problem could see it temporarily evacuate the space station but that worst-case scenario is deemed highly unlikely.
Dealing with unexpected problems was "part of the challenge" of such missions, shuttle commander Rick Sturckow said in a televised interview from space late last Thursday.Reuters
James Reilly and John "Danny" Olivas are scheduled to begin the third spacewalk of the current mission of the shuttle to the space station.
The spacewalkers' first scheduled task will be to repair a bit of protruding insulation near the rear of the shuttle. A corner of the thermal blanket tore loose during Atlantis' launch last Friday, potentially exposing inner layers of the shuttle's surface to superheated gases on re-entry.
Another pressing issue is the failure of the Russian computers aboard the US$100 billion space station, which emerged last Wednesday shortly after the installation of a solar wing panel that was brought to the station by the space shuttle.
The Russian computers control a critical part of the space station's navigation system.
"The new power feed to the Russian segment could be the problem," International Space Station programme manager Mike Suffredini told a news briefing at the Johnson Space Centre late last Thursday.
Suffredini said the Russians would try to reboot the system when the station passed over Russian ground stations yesterday during its orbits around the Earth.
The two Russian cosmonauts aboard will work on the problem with their controllers on the ground through the wee hours of the morning.
Nasa has said a failure to resolve the problem could see it temporarily evacuate the space station but that worst-case scenario is deemed highly unlikely.
Dealing with unexpected problems was "part of the challenge" of such missions, shuttle commander Rick Sturckow said in a televised interview from space late last Thursday.Reuters


