http://www.local6.com/technology/2742496/detail.html

The International Space Station is experiencing a slow, steady drop in
air pressure, and American and Russian flight controllers are
investigating possible causes of the leak.

Mission Control notified astronaut Michael Foale and cosmonaut
Alexander Kaleri about the leak just before their bedtime late Monday
afternoon.

"There's no action for you at this time and no immediate concerns,"
Mission Control assured the two men. "We'll continue to investigate
this on the next shift and we may have some actions for you tomorrow."

Not long afterward, Foale radioed back that the men had gone ahead and
done some checks of their own. He reminded Mission Control that
Kaleri, one of the last two men on Mir, was sent to the Russian
outpost in 2000 to look for a similar leak and was doing a thorough
check of all the accessible valves leading to the vacuum of space.

The valves on the U.S. side of the space station checked out fine,
Foale said. The men then turned their attention to the valves inside
the Russian compartments and also the Russian cargo ship docked to the
complex.

They found nothing amiss.

"We're going to call it a night and make sure we don't misplace the
leak (detection) equipment," Foale said with a chuckle.

Mission Control first noticed the drop in pressure Jan. 1 and said the
data showed a daily decline of about 2 millimeters of mercury. As of
Monday, the pressure had declined a total of nine millimeters. That is
equivalent to about one-quarter of a pound per square inch, said NASA
spokesman James Hartsfield.

Normal pressure inside the space station is 14.7 pounds per square
inch, the same as at sea level.

Foale knows firsthand about falling pressure in space. He was aboard
Russia's Mir space station in 1997 when a supply ship rammed into a
lab module and ruptured it; the lab was quickly sealed off from the
rest of the outpost.

Back in November, Foale and Kaleri reported a loud noise that sounded
like a flapping sheet of metal. The air pressure remained stable,
however, and all the other systems seemed fine, too. NASA has yet to
determine what caused the noise.

NASA also is monitoring a malfunctioning gyroscope used for motion
control and a broken oxygen generator. Spare parts are at a premium
because of the nearly yearlong grounding of the space shuttle fleet,
the result of the Columbia tragedy.

Foale and Kaleri are 21/2 months into a six-month space station stay.
They rocketed into orbit from Kazakhstan in October and are to return
there via a Russian capsule in April.

xponent
Sssssssssssssssss Maru
rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to