Coolant Leak on Space Station May Delay Return of Astronauts to Earth
SLATE
Posted
Friday, May 10, 2013, at 11:27 AM
Ammonia coolant has been seen leaking into space from the P6 truss on
the Interantional Space Station. NASA is planning a spacewalk to
investigate and repair the leak.
Photo by NASA
Photo by NASA
Right now, NASA is planning at least one EVA—extra-vehicular
activity, or spacewalk—for an astronaut on the International Space
Station to investigate and hopefully repair a coolant leak. NASA says
the crew is not in danger, and the ISS is otherwise operating normally. Pete Harding at NASASpaceflight.com has a detailed article on this situation.
Basically, turning solar energy into power for the station generates
heat, which must be removed. A cooling system is used that is
essentially a series of ammonia-filled pipes; they run over the heated
area, warming up the ammonia, which is then pumped away from the hot
spot so it can radiate that heat away into space.
A small leak in one of the pipes has been known for years. It was so
tiny it wasn’t a huge concern; a mission a few years back brought more
ammonia to the station to refill the pipes. But on May 9, ground
controllers noticed the leak had increased suddenly, and astronauts on
board ISS saw flakes of frozen ammonia leaking out into space. Because
of this, a spacewalk is being scheduled most likely for Saturday, May
11, to take a look and identify the culprit. A second, later EVA will
probably then be needed to swap out the faulty part.
This situation is serious, but being handled. Everything on the ISS
has redundant backups, so the pipe is being shut down and the backup
unit getting prepped for use.
This does throw a monkey in the wrench of the schedule; Commander
Hadfield, Tom Marshburn (a likely candidate for at least one of the
spacewalks), and Roman Romanenko were already preparing for their return
to Earth on Monday. That’s now on hold for a while, probably until the
situation is under control. It’s not clear how long the delay will be,
or what this will mean for the launch of the next crew of three astronauts to the station, due for late May.
Spaceflight enthusiasts are discussing this on the NASASpaceflightNow forum,
and it’s fascinating to read. It’s clear NASA is taking this very
seriously, as you’d expect, but it doesn’t sound like this is a
life-or-death situation. Still, any time a contingency (extra) spacewalk
is added in, there are inherent dangers. Hopefully the engineers on the
ground and the astronauts on-board the ISS will take care of this
quickly and efficiently.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home