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Astronauts install porch on space station
19 Jul 2009 00:59:52 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Astronauts connect Japanese platform to station

* Four more spacewalks planned during mission

* NASA says no more heat shield inspections needed (Updates with end of spacewalk, previous CAPE CANAVERAL)

By Chris Baltimore

HOUSTON, July 18 (Reuters) - Spacewalking astronauts secured a "front porch" on Saturday to the International Space Station that will expose scientific experiments to the cold vacuum of outer space.

Lead spacewalker David Wolf and rookie astronaut Timothy Kopra spent about 5 1/2 hours outside the station preparing the Japanese-built platform to be attached to the front of the station's $2.4 billion Kibo laboratory, Japanese for "hope."

Then, using the station's robotic arm, astronauts gingerly drove the four-tonne platform to "hard dock" with the Kibo lab at 7:29 p.m. EDT (2329 GMT).

"It really worked like a champ," said Mark Polansky, commander of the shuttle Endeavour, which arrived at the station on Friday for an 11-day mission.

The platform is designed to hold 10 experimental payloads that need to be exposed to the open environment of space.

NO ADDITIONAL INSPECTIONS NEEDED

In four additional spacewalks scheduled for the mission, astronauts will work on an equipment cart and prepare a docking port for Japan's new cargo ship, which is scheduled to make its debut flight later this year. The next spacewalk is scheduled on Monday.

NASA also completed its initial analysis of Endeavour's heat shield on Saturday and determined no additional inspections would be needed by the shuttle crew.

The agency is trying to figure out why Endeavour lost so much insulating foam from its external fuel tank during the climb to orbit on Wednesday.

NASA has been concerned about flyaway foam since losing shuttle Columbia in 2003. Columbia was hit by a piece of falling foam during launch. The impact broke a panel on one of its wings, allowing hot gases to blast inside the structure as the shuttle flew through the atmosphere for landing 16 days later. All seven astronauts aboard died in the accident.

Any debris impacts on Endeavour were minor, but NASA has said it will not clear any more shuttles for launch until it is sure future tanks will not shed foam like Endeavour's. NASA said on Saturday it expected the work would delay launch of its next flight from Aug. 18 to later in the month.

The U.S. space agency has seven missions remaining after Endeavour's to complete construction of the $100 billion space station, a project of 16 nations, and then retire the shuttle fleet. (Additional reporting by Irene Klotz in Cape Canaveral, Florida; Editing by Peter Cooney)


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Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev (L) visits Ingush leader Yunus-Bek Yevkurov in a Moscow hospital July 18, 2009. Yevkurov is in hospital after surviving an assassination attempt last month. REUTERS/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Mikhail Klimentyev ...



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Last updated:Sun Jul 19 01:02:19 2009