Billions exit bank accounts after years of inflows

By Editor / October 1, 2021 / 0 Comments

Saab builds 9-3 test cars ahead of 2021 production launch

By Editor / October 19, 2021 / 0 Comments

Lithia relaxes grip on store operations

By Editor / October 9, 2021 / 0 Comments

Study raises new concern about earthquakes and fracking fluids

By Editor / September 27, 2021 / 0 Comments

Kirobo the talking robot blasts into space on historic mission

By Editor / November 6, 2021 / 0 Comments

Spacewalk planned to fix ammonia leak on space station

Spacewalk planned to fix ammonia leak on space station

NASA plans to send two astronauts aboard the International Space Station out on a spacewalk on Saturday to try to fix an ammonia leak in a cooling system on one of the station’s solar arrays, the U.S. space agency said on Friday.

The crew spotted a steady stream of small, white frozen ammonia flakes floating away from a coolant line outside the orbital outpost on Thursday.

Mission managers reviewed images and data gathered overnight and said on Friday they tentatively planned to send American astronauts Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn out on Saturday morning to try to stop the leak by replacing a pump on the cooling system.

“The crew is not in danger, and the station continues to operate normally otherwise,” NASA said in a news release.

Ammonia is used to cool the power systems that operate the solar arrays, which provide electricity to the station. Each of the eight solar arrays has its own independent cooling system.

The leak is on the far left side of the station’s truss structure, in an ammonia loop that astronauts previously tried to troubleshoot during a spacewalk in November 2012.

While Cassidy and Marshburn are working outside the space station, crew commander Chris Hadfield, a Canadian astronaut, will choreograph their movements from inside the orbital outpost. Russian cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov, Alexander Misurkin and Roman Romanenko make up the rest of the crew.

(See More)

Courtesy Reuters.com