segunda-feira, 22 de agosto de 2016

NASA astronauts install new docking port for commercial space ships at ISS

A handout picture made available by NASA on 20 August 2016 shows International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 48 crew members Kate Rubins (L) and Jeff Williams (R) preparing to grapple the SpaceX Dragon supply spacecraft from aboard the ISS, in space, 20 July 2016. Rubins and Williams successfully conducted a spacewalk on 19 August 2016 to install the first of two international docking adapters (IDAs). The new docking port will enable the future arrival of US commercial crew spacecraft. EPA/NASA HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY
Two NASA astronauts Friday installed the first of two new docking ports for commercial space ships at the International Space Station (ISS), the US space agency NASA reported.

During a spacewalk of 5 hours and 58 minutes, astronauts Jeff Williams, Commander of the 48th expedition and flight engineer Kate Rubins, fixed the first two points of the International Docking Adapter (IDA).

The IDA's will be used for future arrivals of manned commercial aircraft from Boeing and SpaceX, developed under the NASA manned commercial program, the agency said in a statement.

The installation will give NASA independent access to the ISS for the first time since the withdrawal of its fleet of space shuttles in 2011.

So far, NASA depends on the Russian Soyuz vessels.

Jeff Williams said in a statement that the IDA's open a new chapter in the history of the ISS enabling the access for future commercial vehicles.

The new docking mechanism was transported in June to the ISS aboard a Dragon capsule by California-based private firm SpaceX, after the first IDA was lost during the launch failure of a SpaceX flight in June 2015.

According to NASA, commercial flights from Florida to the ISS will increase the time for US crews to devote to scientific research and help prepare astronauts for deeper space missions, including possible travel to Mars.

Source: EFE

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