Spacewalkers Cassidy and Parmitano Ready for EVA-23 on Tuesday

On Tuesday, Luca Parmitano—who last week became Italy's first spacewalker—will be venture again out of the Quest airlock with Chris Cassidy. Photo Credit: NASA
On Tuesday, Luca Parmitano—who last week became Italy’s first spacewalker—will venture again out of the Quest airlock with Chris Cassidy. Photo Credit: NASA

Exactly a week since Expedition 36 crewmen Chris Cassidy and Luca Parmitano ventured outside the International Space Station, the two men are due to perform a second spacewalk on Tuesday, 16 July. It will be the 23rd station-based EVA from the U.S. Operating Segment (USOS) and will see Cassidy on his sixth career spacewalk. Designated “EV1,” he will sport red stripes on the legs of his suit for identification, whilst Parmitano—who made history on 9 July by becoming Italy’s first spacewalker—will wear a pure-white suit as “EV2.” The two men will prepare the station for the future arrival of Russia’s Nauka science module, relocate a Wireless Video System External Transceiver Assembly (WETA) from the P-1 truss to the Harmony node, install a set of V-guides onto the port and starboard Radiator Grapple Bars, and complete a series of ambitious get-ahead tasks.

Cassidy and Parmitano’s inaugural EVA on 9 July was highly successful, and the spacewalkers concluded their duties about 30 minutes ahead of schedule. This led to some reprioritizing of their tasks for EVA-23. Notably, the removal and replacement of a failed camera at the corner of the Exposed Facility on Japan’s Kibo laboratory—originally planned as a get-ahead task—is now firmly entrenched as a main objective. Additionally, six other get-ahead items have been attached to the spacewalk. These include replacing a faulty lens cover on a Camera/Light Pan/Tilt Assembly (CLPA) on the Canadarm2 robotic arm, the tie down of brake handles on the port-side Crew and Equipment Translation Aid (CETA) cart, and the relocation of a portable articulating foot restraint from the P-1 to the S-0 truss.

This forms the latest spacewalk in a “hot EVA summer” for Expedition 36, which also saw cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Aleksandr Misurkin working outside the station’s Russian Operating Segment (ROS) on 24 June. For tomorrow’s EVA, Yurchikhin and U.S. astronaut Karen Nyberg will serve as “intravehicular” crew members, helping Cassidy and Parmitano into their suits and running the checklists inside the Quest airlock.

Karen Nyberg (left) and Fyodor Yurchikhin work with a suited Luca Parmitano in the Quest airlock during preparations for the 9 July EVA. Nyberg and Yurchikhin will continue their roles as "intravehicular" crew members on Tuesday's EVA. Photo Credit: NASA
Karen Nyberg (left) and Fyodor Yurchikhin work with a suited Luca Parmitano in the Quest airlock during preparations for the 9 July EVA. Nyberg and Yurchikhin will continue their roles as “intravehicular” crew members on Tuesday’s EVA. Photo Credit: NASA

Early Tuesday morning, after post-sleep and personal hygiene activities, the spacewalkers will jump right onto a well-trodden path of 60 minutes of “pre-breathing” on masks, during which time the airlock’s inner “equipment lock” will be depressed from its “ambient” 14.7 psi down to 10.2 psi. Their next step will be the process of donning and purging their bulky Extravehicular Mobility Units (EMUs)—with Parmitano’s suit emblazoned with the red, white, and green stripes of the Italian national flag—after which the atmosphere will be repressurized to 14.7 psi. The astronauts will then enter a nominal pre-breathing period, lasting about 50 minutes, followed by a further 50 minutes of In-Suit Light Exercise (ISLE). This protocol was first debuted on the STS-134 shuttle mission in May 2011 and will involve Cassidy and Parmitano flexing their knees for four minutes, resting for one minute, and repeating over and over until the 50 minutes are up. ISLE serves to remove nitrogen from the spacewalkers’ blood in a much shorter time period.

An hour before the EVA’s scheduled 8:10 a.m. EDT start time, the fully-suited pair and their equipment will be transferred into Quest’s outer “crew lock,” and Nyberg and Yurchikhin will confirm the closure of hatches between the two locks. Depressurization will be briefly halted at 5 psi for standard leak checks, after which the process will resume and continue until the crew lock is at near-vacuum conditions. EVA-23 will officially commence when Cassidy and Parmitano transfer their suits’ critical life-support utilities onto internal battery power. Monitoring them from Mission Control in Houston, Texas, will be a team headed by ISS Flight Director David Korth. Fellow astronaut Shane Kimbrough will occupy the Capcom’s console throughout the EVA.

Unlike last Tuesday’s spacewalk, which saw Cassidy as first outside, on EVA-23 it will be Parmitano who will be first to depart the Quest crew lock. He will configure tethers and equipment before Cassidy joins him to temporarily stow a multi-layer insulation bag for the Main Bus Switching Unit (MBSU) and retrieve a large orbital replacement unit bag, containing the V-guides that he will need later on the spacewalk. After checking each other’s suits and tethers, the men will part ways to commence their first tasks.

EVA-23 will be Chris Cassidy's sixth career spacewalk. He has already spent more than 29 cumulative hours outside, including last week's excursion with Luca Parmitano. Photo Credit: NASA
EVA-23 will be Chris Cassidy’s sixth career spacewalk. He has already spent more than 29 cumulative hours outside, including last week’s excursion with Luca Parmitano. Photo Credit: NASA

For Cassidy, this will involve a return to a rather thorny site on the port side of the box-shaped Z-1 truss, atop the station’s Unity node. Here, he will conclude the reconfiguration of Y-Bypass jumper cables, which he began during last week’s EVA-22. Due to the sheer volume of cables, connectors, and jumpers—caused by numerous electrical and data system upgrades and changes over the years—the area has been nicknamed “The Rat’s Nest.” After Cassidy has completed the jumper installation process, which should require about 30 minutes of his time, Mission Control will route power to the DC Converter Unit connected to the system to perform a checkout. Whilst this is underway, Cassidy will reconfigure a flap of multi-layer insulation on a Remote Power Control Module close by.

As Cassidy works at the Z-1 site, Parmitano will translate “under” the Unity node to its aft end cone, where he will temporarily stow a bag of data cables. He will mate the 1553 data cables, hooking up the Power and Data Grapple Fixture (PDGF) on Russia’s Zarya module to ISS data systems and checking for a misconfigured multi-layer insulation grounding wire inside one of the PDGF connector doors. Parmitano will release a short section of the data cable and route it forward onto the Pressurized Mating Adapter (PMA)-1, which forms the junction between the U.S. and Russian segments of the station. This will ultimately permit Canadarm2 to access the Russian segment.

The relative smallness of the Quest airlock is amply illustrated in this view from EVA-22, as Cassidy (with red stripes on the legs of his suit) and Parmitano venture outside. Photo Credit: NASA
The relative smallness of the Quest airlock is amply illustrated in this view from EVA-22, as Cassidy (with red stripes on the legs of his suit) and Parmitano venture outside. Photo Credit: NASA

After the 1553 installation, which is expected to require about 15 minutes, he will embark on the hour-long task of retrieving and installing an Ethernet cable in support of Russia’s Nauka science module, whose launch is anticipated later this year or early in 2014. Parmitano will connect one end to a spare Ethernet connector at the junction between the Destiny, Unity, and Tranquility modules, then lay out the cable as he works his way aft toward the Russian segment. This will eventually allow Canadarm2 to access the Russian segment of the station. He will utilize EVA handrails and wire ties to restrain the cable. When he reaches the forward end of Zarya, he will tie off the cable onto a handrail, from which Russian spacewalkers will pick up the work later this year. Whilst Parmitano cleans up the worksite, Mission Control will conduct a short communications check, after which the astronaut will collect his equipment and return to stow it in the Quest airlock.

After completing his own work on the Y-Bypass jumper cables, Cassidy will translate to the P-1 segment on the port side of the space station’s expansive truss structure to begin the installation of four radiator V-guides onto the Radiator Grapple Bars (RGBs). These bars—which arrived at the ISS aboard SpaceX’s CRS-2 Dragon cargo ship in March 2013—were installed on the P-1 and S-1 trusses during last week’s EVA. When Cassidy reaches the P-1 worksite, he will bolt the V-guides onto stowage brackets attached to the RGB, using his pistol-grip tool to secure them, before repeating the process on the RGB on the S-1 truss. The lengthy task should require about 90 minutes.

Parmitano will then move from his cable work to the S-0 central truss segment, where the starboard Secondary Power Distribution Assembly (SPDA) door is located. Two weeks ago, on 27 June, efforts to use Canadarm2 and the Dextre robot to open the port-side door were unsuccessful when a PIP pin lanyard caused an obstruction. Parmitano will assess the situation and, if practicable, he will use scissors to cut the lanyard and free the door. He will then repeat the procedure for the starboard SPDA door.

By this stage, about two and a half hours should have elapsed on EVA-23 and the spacewalkers’ next task will be a joint one. They are scheduled to remove and relocate the Wireless Video System External Transceiver Assembly (WETA) antenna, one of whose roles is to provide helmet video views. The astronauts will demate three connectors from the P-1 truss and release a single bolt which holds the 7-foot-long WETA antenna stanchion in place. They will position the WETA and its stanchion onto Cassidy’s body restraint tether, retrieve their tools, and move to the aft end cone of the Harmony node. Due to the large size of the WETA, Parmitano will pay close attention as Cassidy moves, in order to ensure that he does not bump anything on the way. At Harmony, the men will return the WETA to a vertical position and drive the bolt to secure it in place.

David Korth (second from right) will serve as ISS Flight Director in Mission Control during tomorrow's EVA-23. Photo Credit: NASA
David Korth (second from right) will serve as ISS Flight Director in Mission Control during tomorrow’s EVA-23. Photo Credit: NASA

Four hours into the spacewalk, the astronauts will go their separate ways again. Cassidy will head to Japan’s Kibo laboratory on the far-port side of the station to replace a camera on the forward corner of the porch-like Exposed Facility. Incidentally, Cassidy installed this camera—part of the EF Visual Equipment—on his first space mission, back in July 2009, and consequently he is familiar with the area. He will install a “scoop” onto the camera, before removing two bolts, unlatching the camera, and demating one connector. Cassidy will then install a replacement camera, whereupon Mission Control will activate its heater and begin the process of testing after the EVA has ended.

Parmitano’s next task will also be a return to a familiar place: the ExPRESS Logistics Carrier (ELC)-2, from where he retrieved two materials science experiments last week. This time, his role is to remove a large blanket of multi-layer insulation from the failed Main Bus Switching Unit (MBSU)-1. This was removed—though not without difficultyduring a pair of EVAs by Expedition 32 crewmembers Sunita Williams and Aki Hoshide last summer and presently resides on ELC-2. By removing the insulation blanket and using wire ties to restrain flaps, Parmitano will ensure that they do not interfere with robotic interfaces with MBSU-1. This will enable the failed unit to be removed robotically in the future.

With the exception of get-ahead tasks, these activities will conclude what is expected to be the final U.S. EVA of 2013. Cassidy and Parmitano are expected to remain outside for about 6.5 hours.

 

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