Astronauts Embark On Final Spacewalk
Will Attach Experimentation Facilities, Monitoring Devices, To Space Station Exterior
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Don't forget your keys! Astronaut Stanley Love's helmet-cam captures his departure from the space station for the third and final spacewalk of the Shuttle Atlantis mission. (NASA TV)
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Astronaut Stanley Love in the Shuttle Atlantis cargo hold working to release scientific experiments to be attached to the space station exterior. (NASA TV)
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Video 'Out Of This World' Research Astronauts on the Shuttle Atlantis will attach a laboratory to the international space station that is designed to conduct research in the weightlessness of space. Drew Levinson reports.
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Photo Essay Atlantis Mission STS-122 Space shuttle brought Europe's Columbus lab to the international space station.
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News Tools Space Place Your source for detailed, accurate information about the world of space exploration.
Spacewalkers Rex Walheim and Stanley Love floated out of the hatch as the space station passed over the Pacific Ocean west of southern Chile.
Walheim and Love were scheduled to spend about 6½ hours installing the experiments, retrieving an old space station gyroscope and, if there's time, examining a tiny chip on a handrail near the spacewalk hatch and a jammed solar rotary joint.
Station commander Peggy Whitson helped Walheim and Love don their spacesuits, moving so quickly the duo was left with a half-hour break before they could start the final tasks to get them out the door. Whitson suggested they take a nap.
"There's no napping in spaceflight!" Walheim quipped.
The astronauts awoke Friday to a song by German Drafi Deutscher, "Marmor,Stein Und Eisen Bricht," whose title translates to English as "Marble Breaks and Iron Bends." German astronaut Hans Schlegel said the tune, popular in his youth, talks about finding one great love.
"I'm very fortunate that I found that in my wife, Heike," he said.
One of the pieces of equipment that Walheim and Love will install is an observatory to monitor the sun. The SOLAR payload consists of three instruments designed to measure the solar spectral irradiance throughout virtually the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from 17 nm to 100 μm, in which 99% of solar energy is emitted.
The crew will also will use the robotic arm to install the European Technology Exposure Facility, or EuTEF, a facility that will allow scientists to carry out several experiments requiring exposure to the uniquely harsh environment of space.
Once those are attached to Columbus and the gyroscope is stowed in the shuttle's cargo bay, the spacewalkers hope to turn their attention to two trouble spots on the station.
The chip - discovered by Love during Monday's spacewalk and thus dubbed Love Crater - is the apparent result of a micrometeorite strike. It may be where spacewalking astronauts have torn their gloves over the past year or so. To find out, Walheim and Love will run a spare glove over the hole to see if the material snags.
The pair also hopes to have time to inspect the rotary joint, which is needed to turn one of the space station's two sets of huge solar wings. Spacewalkers have peered inside several times since the joint broke last fall, but NASA is still trying to determine what is causing the metal parts to grind, clogging the joint with shavings.
While the spacewalkers are outside, other crew members will continue working inside Columbus to get the lab ready to produce science in the coming days.
Atlantis is scheduled to undock from the space station on Monday and land in Florida on Wednesday.
For more information, visit the STS-122 mission page on the NASA Web site: www.nasa.gov
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- I look forward to hearing of the first findings from the new module!
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