Friday, February 15, 2008

Live in orbit: Gyroscope in motion














Love holds the gyroscope while it moves








Walheim and Love

Love holding gyroscope in motion

After attaching a solar experiment package to the Columbus module, Stan Love on the Canada Arm II grasped a stored gyroscope as it was moved toward Atlantis' payload bay.

The 1,200-pound gyroscope failed in October 2006 and was replaced. It will be returned to Earth, refurbished and saved for a spare. Four working gyroscopes keep the space station in the correct orientation.

The behind-schedule spacewalk was expected to make up lost time, said NASA commentator John Ira Petty. Love's glove was slightly damaged, but he was given permission to continue working.

The spacewalk officially began when the pair switched their spacesuits to battery power at 8:07 a.m. EST. Walheim's helmet camera will be No. 18, while his spacesuit will have an unbroken line. Love's camera will be No. 16, while his spacesuit has a broken line.

On the mission's third spacewalk, Love will function like a human forklift, holding three massive - but weightless - pieces of equipment while he is attached to the space station robot arm. On separate swings of the arm, he will move two European experiment modules and a gyroscope.

If the 6.5-hour spacewalk runs ahead of schedule, Walheim and Love will have several additional tasks: inspecting the starboard solar alpha rotary joint and inspecting damage to a handrail that might be causing glove damage.

Atlantis is scheduled to land at 9:06 a.m. Wednesday at Kennedy Space Center, shortly before the Navy shoots down a low-orbiting, non-functioning spy satellite that carries a toxic half-ton of hydrazine rocket fuel.

Click for interactive graphic on Columbus installation.

Click for flight day 9 execute package.

Click for STS-122 fact sheet.

Click for NASA-TV schedule, which details mission events.















The SOLAR and EuTEF modules sit on a rack in the shuttle's payload bay.

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