Updates ISS UPDATES

From ISS On-Orbit Status Report for 05/12/2010.

Bone Calcium Loss:
Tonight CDR Scott Kelly starts the overnight fast for another dosing with the Bisphosphonates Alendronate pill protocol tomorrow morning. [Only plain water is allowed for ~10 hours prior to dosing. The Bisphosphonates study should determine whether antiresorptive agents (that help reduce bone loss) in conjunction with the routine in-flight exercise program will protect ISS crewmembers from the regional decreases in bone mineral density documented on previous ISS missions.]
 
Roscosmos PAO: "ISS to Protect Against Thunderstorm".

Russian scientists performed a unique experiment onboard the International Space Station which provided the opportunity to obtain data about the nature of thunderstorms. This will also help to predict weather, or long-term climate changes. In addition, the scientists can define electromagnetically-dangerous altitudes for rockets and satellites.
The experiment’s super-sensitive equipment Violet allowed to study flashes 30km over the Earth in detail. Important conclusions were made on the basis of the research data obtained over Africa, TSNIIMASH official told The Voice of Russia.
The scientist states that mass and energy exchange is ongoing between troposphere and upper atmosphere. Only small part of giant energy cumulated over the thunderstorm front is transitioned into flashes. The energy exchange has global character, so the studies by Russian scientists may help in climate and weather change prediction.
 
NASA TV Video: Expedition 26 Crew Departs for Kazakh Launch Site.​
 
Take a tour of the Node 2 OVHD CQ (Crew Quarters) with CDR Scott Kelly!​
 
From ISS On-Orbit Status Report for 06/12/2010.

FE-2 Oleg Skripochka had ~90 minutes for more cargo unloading from Progress M-08M/40P, docked at DC-1 Nadir, and IMS (Inventory Management System)-guided transfer to ISS storage locations.

FE-1 Alexander Kaleri meanwhile transferred the equipment of the new Russian GFI-17 "Molniya" FOTON-GAMMA experiment from 40P and set it up in the SM (Service Module).

Next, Alexander & Oleg joined up for several hours to install & connect the inboard part of the GFI-17 hardware. Documentary photography was part of the activity, as always. [Installed, on panel 310, were two boxes – a stand-alone temperature control box (MAKT) and a data control & monitoring unit (MKSD) – which were then connected to each other, to the onboard Ethernet network and the BITS2-12 measurement telemetry system. The latter was then reactivated. The external BVD sensor box for GFI-17 will be installed during the Russian Orlan EVA-27 in January. The Molniya-Gamma space experiment is designed to study gamma and optical bursts during thunderstorm activity.]

CDR Scott Kelly checked out the Node 1 Nadir hatch area for remaining CBCS (Centerline Berthing Camera System) components, for returning them to stowage to await later installation for mission STS-133/ULF-5 (NET February 2011).

Also due to the delay of ULF-5, Scott re-latched the Node 1 Nadir hatch mechanism which had been set to Unlatch on 29/10 in preparation for PMM (Permanent Multipurpose Module) berthing.

Scott also had ~3 hours 45 minutes for major IFM (Inflight Maintenance) on the CIR (Combustion Integrated Rack) at LAB1S3 (Lab Starboard 3), aimed at re-aligning the PaRIS (Passive Rack Isolation System). [The PaRIS snubber pins appear to have loosened during operation. Scott's procedure adjusted the PaRIS Snubber pins and cups, torqued the jam nuts, verified that there was no rack motion and re-installed the alignment guides and microgravity rack barrier, followed by closeout.]
 
ESA: "Ask Astronaut Paolo"!

Ask ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli a question during his mission aboard the International Space Station. Post your video question here on ESA YouTube, and Paolo will answer the best ones directly from Space!

 
From ISS On-Orbit Status Report for 07/12/2010.

FE-1 Alexander Kaleri & FE-2 Oleg Skripochka had ~3 hours for a major joint activity, i.e., performing an assessment of available stowage space in the RS (Russian Segment). [Using CTBEs (Cargo Transfer Bag Equivalents) or dm3 for measurement units, Alexander & Oleg inspected/audited stowage areas in the FGB and behind MRM-1 panels, DC-1 and MRM-2 and, as time permitted, also in SM, referring to potential and estimated volumes listed in uplinked stowage zone & ID tables.]

In the US Lab, CDR Scott Kelly completed IFM (Inflight Maintenance) on the CIR (Combustion Integrated Rack) / FIR (Fluids Integrated Rack), removing a lower left bridge bracket (with damaged threads) between the racks (LAB1D4) and replacing it with a scavenged bridge bracket from the Lab stand-off link at OVHD-PORT.
 
Roscosmos PAO: "Russian EVA to Take Place in 1.5 Months".

Next EVA of the Russian cosmonauts onboard the ISS is to take place in 1.5 months, official of Russian rocket and space industry told Interfax-AVN.
"The EVA by Oleg Skripohcka and Dmitry Kondratiev is scheduled for Jan. 21, 2011", he said, adding that Konrative will arrive at the station in mid December.
The cosmonauts are to dismount impulse plasma injector from the Zvezda’s outer surface, and install Russian high-speed data transmission equipment Photon-Gamma intended to study gamma-bursts and optical radiation during thunderstorms.
 
NASA TV Video: Station Crew Readies to Double Size.​
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPBeiLv_m-s"]YouTube - Station Crew Readies to Double Size[/ame]
 
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From ISS On-Orbit Status Report for 09/12/2010.

CDR Scott Kelly worked several hours of IFM (Inflight Maintenance) on the WRS (Water Recovery System) UPA (Urine Processor Assembly) in Node 3, updating its data module with a new software load, Version 6.0, to restore it to full functionality. [Purpose of the firmware update: to fix an EEPROM (Electronically Erasable PROgrammable Memory) write error, incorporate motor calibration overrides, update conductivity sensor K1 calibration, add overfill & monitoring software, delete the need for pressure overrides during RFTA (Recycle Filter Tank Assembly) changeout activities, and add a WSTA (Waste Storage Tank Assembly) leak to the triggers for the event annunciation "UPA Waste H2O Storage Tank Qty High" (#16224). After locking down the T2 COLBERT treadmill by installing its four alignment guides for load protection and then removing the WHC (Waste & Hygiene Compartment) Kabin enclosure, Scott retrieved a laptop cable from JLP stowage, converted the wireless SSC-16 (Station Support Computer-16) from wireless to wired function, accessed the UPA data module, prepared it and the laptop for commanding, performed & verified the software update, deactivated UPA, restored SSC-16 to wireless function, and reactivated UPA. Later, after the Kabin was reinstalled, CDR also removed the T2 alignment guides.]

CDR Kelly then reconnected the WHC from backflow back to feeding the UPA (Urine Processor Assembly) and reported the flush counter, a periodic activity.

MELFI Failure:
MELFI-2 (Minus Eighty Laboratory Freezer for ISS-2) in the US Lab spontaneously went into Autostop mode yesterday, as it also did last Friday 03/12. Samples stowed in MELFI-2 were transferred to MELFI-1, located in the JPM (JEM Pressurized Module), and MELFI-2 was powered down. [As a short term backup for MELFI-1, JAXA has agreed to power up & operate the JPM's MELFI-3 along with MELFI-1. The cold-bricks currently in MELFI-2 will be used to get MELFI-3 thermally stable quickly. Long term requirements for supporting MELFI-3 in the JPM along with MELFI-1 are being assessed and a decision will be forthcoming on the plan for leaving MELFI-3 activated. Meanwhile, ground specialists are analyzing the root cause of the MELFI-2 failure.]

Progress Propellant Transfer:
TsUP-Moscow reported that propellants from Progress M-07M/39P (docked at SM Aft) have been successfully transferred to FGB tanks, with enough props left for the de-orbit burn.

Conjunction Alert:
Flight controllers are following a conjunction with a piece of orbital debris, Object 25502 (an Atlas 2A Centaur rocket body) with TCA (Time of Closest Approach) on Saturday 11/12 at 8:42 PM GMT, currently classified as "medium concern". Observations continue, and TsUP-Moscow has been notified at today's IMMT (ISS Mission Management Team) meeting. Decision date for DAM (Debris Avoidance Maneuver) is 10/12.
 
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ESA: "Space station tracks months-long voyages of ships at sea".

ESA’s experimental ship detector on the International Space Station has pinpointed more than 60 000 ocean-going vessels so far. It has been able to follow the routes of individual ships for months at a time.

Hosted by Europe’s Columbus research module on the International Space Station (ISS), and activated on 1 June, the tracking system picks up Automatic Identification System (AIS) signals, more usually employed by port authorities and coastguards to keep tabs on local ship traffic.

All international vessels, passenger carriers and cargo ships above 300 tonnes are mandated to carry AIS VHF-radio transponders.

“AIS messages are designed to be used only on a local basis, with a range of 50 km or so to the horizon,” explained Torkild Eriksen of the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI), which built the NORAIS receiver in collaboration with Kongsberg Seatex.

“Instead, we are picking them up from 350 km in orbit, when they might have travelled up to 2000 km. Our receiver, therefore, had to be designed for extreme sensitivity to detect such weak signals.”

This initiative, funded by ESA, is part of the trend of using the ISS as a platform to observe and monitor our planet. The Station’s orbital inclination and altitude are different to those of most observation satellites, offering other ground patterns over about 95% of the population.

“Operating from space, we have been able to track ships for long periods as they cross the ocean,” explained Andreas-Nordomo Skauen of FFI. Nearly 30 million AIS messages were received in only four months from more than 60 000 different transmitters.

The results give an overview of the ship traffic beneath the Station’s orbit, with coverage extending as far as polar latitudes.

A wide field of view

“Over the four-month period,” added Mr Skauen, “we watched one ship travel from the western Pacific to Argentina then over to Europe and down to Africa, picking up its AIS signal from two to seven times per day, depending on latitude.

“So we can reveal exactly where a vessel has been in the marine environment, information that would be very useful to port, fisheries and marine authorities.”

From the Station’s orbit, the NORAIS receiver has a maximum 4400 km-diameter field of view. Signal detection is easiest when vessels are far apart in open water. In the busiest stretches of water such as the English Channel, North Sea and Malacca Straits, AIS signals swamp each other, and vessels get lost in the crowd.

“This is not a problem, however, as these particular areas are already well covered by coastal base stations,” explained Mr Eriksen. “This system’s usefulness is its global reach.”

The Vessel ID System on Columbus has run on a largely automated basis with weekly instructions uploaded via Norway’s national User Support Operations Centre, part of an ESA-wide network serving ISS experimenters.

“We surveyed both land and ocean, and will pass our findings to the International Telecommunications Union and International Maritime Organisation as they consider introducing these new bands,” said Mr Eriksen.
 
NASA TV Video: Soyuz Crew Readies for Launch to ISS.​
 
From ISS On-Orbit Status Report for 10/12/2010.

In Soyuz TMA-01M/24S, FE-1 Alexander Kaleri performed more troubleshooting on the SA's (Descent Module's) "Neptun-ME" console (PKSA) which failed during ascent, today downloading a log file from the InPU display unit to the RS1 laptop for subsequent ground analysis, supported by ground specialist tagup. [Preliminary results from the Russian specialists have indicated that the problem was hardware related.]

CDR Scott Kelly worked in the JPM in preparation for the arrival of the JAXA HTV-2 (H-II Transfer Vehicle-2) next January, starting with the HTV HCP (Hardware Command Panel) and five HCP power & data cables. [New jumpers will be required to provide redundant power to the HTV when it is berthed to the Node 2 Zenith port. While the nominal berthing port for HTV is Node 2 Nadir, the Japanese space vehicle will have to be transferred to Node 2 Zenith in order to allow STS-133/Discovery docking to Node 2 Forward in February.]

For the upcoming relocation of the ROBoT (Robotics Onboard Trainer) activity from Node 1 to LAB1S5 (Lab Starboard 5) for HTV-2 OBT (Onboard Training) activities, flight controllers uplinked several questions to Scott to downlink his assessment of the suitability of the LAB1S5 location for the planned drills. [ROBoT uses DOUG (Dynamic Operations Ubiquitous Graphics) software, a hand controller and two T61p laptops (one for graphics, one for the simulation) for on-orbit training of MSS (Mobile Service System) and SSRMS (Space Station Remote Manipulator System) operations.]

Scott then worked on the rack at LAB1S5, uninstalling & removing the brackets from the Cupola RWS (Robotic Workstation) to stowage, to make room for the ROBoT relocation.

Wearing light-weight cryo gloves for protection, Scott performed IFM (Inflight Maintenance) on MELFI-3 (Minus Eighty Laboratory Freezer for ISS-3) in the JPM, switching activities from the failed MELFI-2 facility in the US Lab to the newly activated MELFI-3. [After clearing out all MELFI-3 trays and stowing them, Scott transferred the MELFI-2 trays into MELFI-3, Dewar by Dewar, to assist in quicker cooldown of the latter once it is activated. MELFI-2 was left without trays to speed its warm-up, reducing the condensation that would have formed on the trays. Background: On 08/12, MELFI-2 spontaneously went into Autostop mode, as it did the week before. As a short term backup for MELFI-1, JAXA has agreed to power up & operate the JPM's MELFI-3 along with MELFI-1. Long term requirements for supporting MELFI-3 in the JPM along with MELFI-1 are being assessed and a decision will be forthcoming on the plan for leaving MELFI-3 activated. Meanwhile, ground specialists are analyzing the root cause of the MELFI-2 failure.]

Conjunction Alert:
Flight controllers continue to monitor a conjunction with a piece of orbital debris, Object 25502 (an Atlas 2A Centaur rocket body) with a TCA (Time of Closest Approach) on Saturday 11/12 at 8:42 PM GMT, still classified as "medium concern" at this time. Observations continue. Decision date for a DAM (Debris Avoidance Maneuver)is today at 9:12 PM GMT. DAM TIG (Time of Ignition) is 6:24 PM GMT. Note: This is an especially critical time for a DAM/reboost due to rendezvous/docking constraints posed by HTV-2 and STS-133/ULF-5.
 
NASA: "NASA Awards Space Station Cargo Mission Services Contract".

NASA has awarded a contract with a potential value of $171 million to Lockheed Martin Corp. of Gaithersburg, Md., for support of International Space Station cargo mission services.

The contract will support planning, coordination, preparation and packing of standardized containers for cargo missions to the station by international partner and commercial cargo vehicles. Lockheed Martin will process flight crew equipment including clothing and personal hygiene items, housekeeping items, audio and video equipment, laptop computers, batteries and crew survival equipment. The contract also includes provisions to support similar services for future vehicles to the station.

A three-month phase-in period and the three-year basic period of the cost-plus-award-fee contract have a total estimated value of $85 million. The contract phase-in period begins Jan. 1, 2011. The basic period extends from April 1, 2011, through March 31, 2014. Exercising four one-year extension options worth a total of $86 million would bring the contract value to $171 million.

Work on the contract will be performed at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston and other Texas locations. Major Texas subcontractors include Bastion Technologies and Dittmar Associates, both of Houston; GHG Corp. of Webster; LZ Technology in Alvin; Rothe Enterprises in San Antonio; and the University of Texas at El Paso.
 
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