Le travail sur le matériel scientifique démarre la semaine sur la Station spatiale internationale

Le travail sur le matériel scientifique démarre la semaine sur la Station spatiale internationale
Astronaute de l'ESA Matthias Maurer Laboratoire de science des matériaux

L’astronaute de l’ESA Matthias Maurer échange des échantillons à l’intérieur du Materials Science Laboratory, un dispositif de recherche en physique. Crédit : NASA

Les sept membres de l’équipage de l’expédition 66 ont entamé le dernier jour de janvier en travaillant sur une grande variété d’équipements de recherche en biologie, physique et sciences de la Terre. Des travaux sur les outils de sortie spatiale et des tests de vision étaient également au programme de lundi à bord de la Station spatiale internationale.

;” data-gt-translate-attributes=”[{” attribute=””>NASA astronauts Kayla Barron and Thomas Marshburn kicked off Monday servicing science components, flight hardware and life support gear. Barron started the morning inside the Kibo laboratory module installing a small satellite orbital deployer onto an experiment platform that will soon be placed into the vacuum of space. Marshburn also worked inside Kibo installing ice bricks to condition science freezers. Barron later replaced a robotic hand controller while Marshburn worked on water transfer tasks.

ESA (European Space Agency) Flight Engineer Matthias Maurer once again wore the Metabolic Space medical monitoring device measuring his heart rate and breathing function while riding the station’s exercise bike. The astronaut from Germany also worked on the Mochii electron-scanning microscope then reloaded firmware supporting an array of wireless instrumentation.

NASA Flight Engineer Raja Chari worked on pistol grip tools that spacewalkers use when removing or attaching bolts on the outside of the space station. He also joined Barron and Marshburn participating in vision tests checking for visual acuity using a standard eye chart. NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei took Monday morning off before spending the afternoon checking cable connections and assisting the cosmonauts with Russian hardware.

Commander Anton Shkaplerov of Roscosmos started the day studying ways to pilot future spacecraft and robots on planetary missions. He then joined Flight Engineer Pyotr Dubrov for a technology study exploring advanced methods to locate landmarks for Earth photography. Dubrov also swapped fuel bottles inside the Combustion Integrated Rack that supports safe research into flames and fuels in microgravity.

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