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Astronauts speed through 5th and final spacewalk
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 27 - 07 - 2009


Astronauts completed the
last spacewalk of their shared shuttle and station mission
Monday, breezing through some rewiring, camera setups and
other outdoor chores, AP reported.
Christopher Cassidy and Thomas Marshburn got so far ahead
on the flight's fifth spacewalk that they even took on
extra work, a welcome change from earlier excursions that
were bogged down by balky equipment and other obstacles.
«Since you guys are cruising, we're running out of
tasks,» Mission Control called up as the spacewalk neared
the four-hour mark. Twenty minutes later came the call:
«We're out of tasks.»
The spacewalk ended up lasting just four hours and 54
minutes, and set the stage for shuttle Endeavour's
scheduled departure Tuesday.
Compared with the previous outings, this one included a
hodgepodge of relatively mundane jobs.
The spacewalkers rearranged electrical hookups for a pair
of gyroscopes, giving them separate power supplies, and
folded down a piece of popped-up insulation on a small
robot hand at the international space station. Then they
hooked up two TV cameras on the brand new porch of a
Japanese lab, installed by the two crews last week. The
cameras will assist in experiment work on the porch and in
the docking in two months of a Japanese cargo carrier.
«Congratulations, you guys just completed the ...
assembly,» Mission Control radioed once the second camera
was secured. Japan's enormous $1 billion lab, named Kibo,
or Hope, required three shuttle flights and took more than
a year to finish.
«I can verify from up close it is, indeed, a beautiful
laboratory,» Marshburn said.
Shuttle commander Mark Polansky had cautioned his
crewmates to keep their guard up, despite the simple tasks.
«In my book, the last one you do is the one that you have
to watch out for the most,» he noted.
Only a handful of other shuttle flights have had five
spacewalks squeezed into them.
«Most shuttle crews are content with three or four,»
Mission Control said in a morning message. «Today, you'll
be joining a very select group by doing your fifth! Thanks
for going the extra mile ... or the extra 125,000 miles
(200,000 kilometers) as the case may be.»
With the spacewalk coming in under five hours, the total
mileage ended up being closer to 90,000, given an orbital
speed of 17,500 mph (28,000 kph).
The five spacewalks together spanned a total of 30 hours.
Cassidy and Marshburn were so eager to get started on
spacewalk No. 5 that they floated out an hour early as the
linked spacecraft sped across the Atlantic, halfway between
South America and Europe. Fifteen minutes later, they
crossed over Italy; the toe and heel of the boot were
clearly visible 220 miles (350 kilometers) beneath them.
Endeavour is scheduled to undock from the space station
Tuesday afternoon, then spend three more days in orbit
before returning to Earth on Friday.
The joint 1½-week mission created the largest space
gathering ever, with 13 people. Seven of them will be
coming back on the shuttle.
Cassidy took his time, as promised, during Monday's
spacewalk in order to keep his carbon dioxide levels down.
His first spacewalk, last Wednesday, had to be cut short
because of elevated carbon dioxide levels in his suit. He
made it all the way to the end of Friday's outing, despite
a slight buildup.
«If you go even slower, we'll get further ahead,»
astronaut David Wolf reminded Cassidy from inside.
As usual, though, Cassidy's brisk metabolic rate went
through the carbon-dioxide absorber in his suit more
quickly than his partner's.
That prompted Mission Control to skip one chore, the
opening of a platform for big spare station parts. It would
have been too time-consuming and officials, playing it
safe, decided to save the job for future spacewalkers.
Everyone was still «busting proud,» Wolf said.
Mission Control officials say Cassidy's background as a
Navy SEAL makes it difficult for him to slow down.


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