NEW YORK — Astronauts on the international space station are preparing for a possible emergency spacewalk May 11 to fix a serious leak of ammonia coolant on the orbiting laboratory.
On May 9, the six residents of the station noticed frozen flakes of ammonia leaking from a coolant loop affixed to one of the eight solar arrays responsible for supplying power to the station. The crew is in no danger, NASA officials say, but if the leak continues, it could cause a shutdown in the loop, possibly preventing the array from generating power.
Space station commander Chris Hadfield of the Canadian Space Agency announced the possibility of the emergency spacewalk via Twitter early May 10 ”Good Morning, Earth! Big change in plans, spacewalk tomorrow, Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn are getting suits and airlock ready,” Hadfield wrote. “Cool!”
NASA has not yet made an official decision on whether to conduct the spacewalk, and is still investigating the problem.
“The crew is not in danger, and the station continues to operate normally otherwise,” agency officials wrote May 10 in a statement. “Work is underway to reroute power channels to maintain full operation of the systems normally controlled by the solar array that is cooled by the suspect loop.”
If the spacewalk goes forward, Cassidy and Marshburn — both NASA astronauts — will float outside the station to inspect the leak and possibly attempt to fix it.
“Suddenly very busy! Ammonia leak on the outside of station means that Cassidy and I will be doing a spacewalk tomorrow to try and repair it,” Marshburn posted on Twitter May 10.
This is not the first time space station crewmembers have spacewalked to repair a coolant leak. Last year, NASA’s Sunita Williams and Japanese spaceflyer Akihiko Hoshidu took a spacewalk to troubleshoot a leak in a coolant loop on the station’s Port 6 truss. The 2012 coolant leak was in the same loop as the current leak, but engineers don’t yet know if the two leaks are related.
On the ground, astronauts Terry Virts of NASA and Samantha Cristoforetti of the European Space Agency are practicing the routine for the potential spacewalk in the Johnson Space Center’s Neutral Buoyancy Lab in Houston. This lab is a giant swimming pool that holds a full-scale mock-up of the international space station used for astronaut training.
“@AstroSamantha and I are doing a dry run in the NBL for tomorrow’s planned Spacewalk, looking for the ammonia leak,” Virts wrote on Twitter.
Hadfield, Marshburn and Cassidy are part of the station’s Expedition 35 crew, along with Russian cosmonauts Roman Romanenko, Pavel Vinogradov and Alexander Misurkin.
Romanenko, Marshburn and Hadfield are scheduled to leave the space station May 13 to return to Earth after close to five months aboard the $100 billion orbiting outpost. On May 28, three new crewmembers are expected to launch from Kazakhstan to join Vinogradov, Misurkin and Cassidy on the station.