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Astronauts begin first spacewalk

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[October 26, 2007]  HOUSTON (AP) -- Two spacewalking astronauts floated out of a hatch on the international space station on Friday to help install a new live-in compartment on the orbiting lab.

[Caption: In this image provided by NASA-TV, astronaut Douglas Wheelock emerges Friday from the hatch of the airlock of the international space station as astronaut Scott Parazynski hangs above him at the start of the first spacewalk of their joint mission and the robotic installation of a new live-in compartment, called Harmony. The spacewalkers' first task will be the removal and stowage of the broken S-band antenna structural assembly. (AP Photo/NASA-TV)] click on picture for larger image

Astronauts Scott Parazynski and Douglas Wheelock got started about 30 minutes ahead of schedule, as the space station passed over South America.

"Like kids on Christmas morning getting up early," one of the spacewalkers said just before he ventured outside.

Parazynski and Wheelock will help astronauts inside the station use a robotic arm to transfer the compartment -- called Harmony -- from Discovery's payload bay to its position on the space station.

Their first task, however, involved removing a broken antenna from the station and packing it aboard Discovery so it can be refurbished back on Earth.

Wheelock rode on the end of the space station's robotic arm to remove the antenna and carry it to Discovery's payload bay.

"Thanks for the ride," he said to astronauts Daniel Tani and Stephanie Wilson, who were operating the arm inside the station.

"No problem, man, you look great out there," Tani responded.

"Yeah, you guys look great," Wilson added.

Harmony will serve as the docking port for European and Japanese laboratories that will be delivered on the next three shuttle flights. The Italian-made module is about the size of a school bus, weighing nearly 16 tons.

Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli joined Discovery's crew to personally deliver the pressurized chamber. He was coordinating the 6.5-hour spacewalk from inside the station.

A veteran spacewalker, Parazynski is set to participate in four of the record-tying five spacewalks scheduled for this jam-packed mission. This is Wheelock's first trip to space.

The 10 astronauts aboard Discovery and the space station face the most challenging construction tasks ever attempted in a single mission.

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They may get a little more time to tackle their to-do list because engineers have not spotted any significant problems with the shuttle's thermal shield.

The crew has set aside several hours Saturday for a focused inspection of any trouble spots, but mission management team chairman John Shannon said that examination probably won't be necessary.

NASA has made damage inspections a priority since the disintegration of the shuttle Columbia in 2003.

A piece of foam broke off Columbia's external fuel tank during liftoff and gashed a wing, allowing hot gases to penetrate the spacecraft during its return to Earth. All seven of its astronauts were killed.

Further analysis is needed before NASA can say for sure that Discovery suffered no significant launch damage. But given all the construction work on this mission, "We are extremely lucky that we have a vehicle that is in such incredible shape," Shannon said.

During Friday's spacewalk, Parazynski and Wheelock are to remove a broken antenna from the station and pack it aboard Discovery for its return to Earth, and prepare a space station girder for relocation later in the flight.

"It's going to be a very interesting day. A lot of folks have been looking forward to this for a long time," Shannon said, referring to Harmony's installation.

___

On the Net:

NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/

[Associated Press; by Liz Austin Peterson]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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