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Construction Mission Continues

International Space Station – October 28, 2007 – Astronauts Scott Parazynski and Dan Tani successfully completed all major tasks during STS-120's second spacewalk, the 17th this year and the 94th dedicated to the International Space Station's assembly and maintenance.

During the 6 hour and 33 minute spacewalk, Parazynski and Tani teamed to disconnect cables from the
Port 6 (P6) truss, allowing it to be removed from the Z1 truss. Once completed, Mission Specialists Stephanie Wilson and Doug Wheelock used the station’s robotic arm to move the P6 and park it overnight. The space walk began at 4:32 a.m. CDT and ended at 11:05 a.m. CDT.

Tani also visually inspected the station’s starboard Solar Alpha Rotary Joint and gathered samples of “shavings” he found under the joint’s Multi-Layer Insulation covers. The task was added so engineers could gather additional information on possible causes of increased friction detected for the past month and a half as the joint rotated for solar array positioning.

Mission managers today decided to limit the use of the rotary joint as they continue to assess the problem. Managers also determined shuttle Discovery’s Thermal Protection System is cleared for reentry.

In addition to detaching the P6 truss, the spacewalkers outfitted the
Harmony module, mated the power and data grapple fixture and reconfigured connectors on the starboard 1 (S1) truss that will allow the radiator on S1 to be deployed from the ground later.

Tomorrow, Wilson, Wheelock and Mission Specialist
Clay Anderson will handoff the P6 element to the shuttle robotic arm, operated by Mission Specialists George Zamka and Commander Pam Melroy. The station’s arm will then be move down along the truss railway closer to the P6 outboard installation point and the P6 will be handed back to Canadarm2 for installation in its new location on P5 during the mission’s third spacewalk.

 


Astronaut Scott Parazynski, STS-120 mission specialist, is pictured in the shuttle's cargo bay during the first of five scheduled spacewalks to perform work on the International Space Station while it is visited by the Space Shuttle Discovery.


Astronauts Daniel Tani (bottom), Expedition 16 flight engineer; Stephanie Wilson, and Doug Wheelock (second left), both STS-120 mission specialists; cosmonaut Yuri I. Malenchenko, flight engineer representing Russia's Federal Space Agency; and astronaut George Zamka (right), STS-120 pilot, take a moment for a photo on the middeck of Space Shuttle Discovery while docked with the International Space Station.

More Information

A Space First
STS-120 Launches on Schedule

STS-120 Mission Report #1

Discovery Docks at Station

STS-120 Mission Report October 26





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