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Forum:Space Shuttles - Space Station
Topic:ISS 67: Russian-ESA spacewalk (7/21/22)
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Expedition 67 commander Oleg Artemyev of Roscosmos and flight engineer Samantha Cristoforetti of ESA, clad in Russian Orlan spacesuits, will begin the six-and-a-half-hour excursion by exiting the space-facing Poisk module. The primary objective is to install platforms and workstation adapter hardware near the 37-foot-long manipulator system mounted to Nauka.

The spacewalkers also will relocate the arm's external control panel, replace a protective window on the arm's camera unit, and extend a Strela telescoping boom from Zarya to Poisk to facilitate future spacewalks.

The European robotic arm will be used to move payloads and equipment outside the Russian segment of the station, joining the Canadian-built Canadarm2 robotic arm and the Japanese arm already supporting station maintenance, operations, and research.

One of the first tasks will see Artemyev and Cristoforetti deploy 10 nanosatellites designed to collect radio electronics data during the spacewalk, which will be the 251st in support of station assembly, maintenance, and upgrades.

Artemyev will wear a Russian spacesuit with red stripes, while Cristoforetti will wear a Russian suit with blue stripes. This will be the sixth spacewalk for Artemyev and the first for Cristoforetti, who will become the fourth European astronaut and first European woman to conduct a spacewalk in a Russian spacesuit.

SkyMan1958I thought that the Russians said that they would not be using the European arm, courtesy of their issues with ESA as a result of the invasion of the Ukraine.
Robert PearlmanThat was an empty threat by Dmitry Rogozin, made days before he was replaced by Yury Borisov as director general of Roscosmos.

Preparation for this spacewalk was never halted and operations on the space station continue as planned.

Robert Pearlman
Spacewalkers complete rare Russian-European EVA

Expedition 67 crewmates Oleg Artemyev of Russia's federal space corporation Roscosmos and Samantha Cristoforetti of the European Space Agency (ESA) spent 7 hours and 5 minutes further configuring a new robotic arm for the Russian segment of the space station and hand deploying a series of small satellites.

Cristoforetti has now become the fourth ESA astronaut and first European woman to perform a spacewalk wearing a Russian Orlan spacesuit.

Working about an hour behind schedule — the two were about 50 minutes late to exit the airlock on the Poisk module at 10:50 a.m. EDT (1450 GMT) — Artemyev and Cristoforetti were still able to complete all but one of the goals planned for the excursion.

The first task for the two were to release into orbit 10 nanosatellites as part of a radio technology experiment. After setting up their tools and removing protective covers — two featuring the image the satellites' namesake, Soviet-era rocket pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky — Artemyev gently tossed each CubeSat overboard.

Artemyev and Cristoforetti then mounted a temporary platform that will used by the new European Robotic Arm (ERA) installed on an earlier spacewalk. The arm will grapple onto the platform to relocate an airlock that was launched with the Rassvet mini-research module to its permanent position on the Nauka multipurpose laboratory module.

Built and provided by ESA, the 37-foot-long (11-m) ERA manipulator will be used to move payloads and equipment outside of the Russian segment of the space station, joining the Canadian-built Canadarm2 robotic arm and the Japanese Kibo arm already supporting station maintenance, operations and research.

Artemyev and Cristoforetti next installed a payload adaptor on the Nauka module. The fixture will be used to hold payloads and tools to assist future spacewalks.

Artemyev then worked to prepare the robotic arm's external control panel to be relocated by placing it into a storage or hibernation mode. The External Man Machine Interface (EMMI) will allow future spacewalkers to move and position the arm from outside of the space station, a feature unique to the ERA.

Cristoforetti, meanwhile, worked on the replacement of a protective cover on one the two identical camera light units located on either end of the two end effectors, or hands, on the ERA. The replacement cover will improve the acuity of the camera.

The two crewmates were then supposed to extend a Strela telescoping boom from the Zarya service module to the Poisk mini-research module to facilitate future spacewalks, but the activity was deferred.

Artemyev and Cristoforetti reentered the Poisk airlock and closed the hatch at 5:55 p.m. EDT (2155 GMT).

Thursday's spacewalk was the sixth for the year and 251st supporting the assembly, upgrade and maintenance of the International Space Station since 1998.

This was the sixth EVA for Artemyev, who now has logged 41 hours and 44 minutes working the vacuum of space. In addition to her other records set, Cristoforetti is also the first European to conduct a Russian spacewalk outside of the International Space Station. The previous three ESA astronauts to wear an Orlan spacesuit — Jean-Loup Chrétien, Thomas Reiter and Jean-Pierre Haigneré — did so at the former Russian Mir space station. Other European astronauts have conducted spacewalks in U.S. spacesuits.

Cristoforetti is also only the second woman to conduct a Russian spacewalk, after NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson in 2002. Thursday's EVA was the first international spacewalk to use Orlan spacesuits in 13 years.

PhilipIt looked like Cristoforetti wore an US helmet cover with extra lights fitted over the blue-striped Orlan MKS space suit helmet?

Robert PearlmanThis is not a new configuration: Russian spacewalkers have been using USOS EMU lights and video camera assemblies (including the rechargeable EVA battery assembly, or REBA, to power both) on their Orlan spacesuits for years.

Here you can see the same set up worn by Anton Shkaplerov (at left) in preparation for VKD-51 in January 2022. Pyotr Dubrov's EMU assembly is different (as was Oleg Artemyev's on the more recent EVA) as it lacked the HD helmet camera.

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