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Cassidy squeezed his glove. Parmitano managed to give the universal OK sign. "Finally, with an unexpected wave of relief," Parmitano saw the internal door open, and the crew pulled him out and his helmet off. He remembers thanking his crewmates "without hearing their words because my ears and nose will still be full of water for a few minutes more." NASA has traced the problem to his spacesuit backpack which is full of life-support equipment. But the precise cause is still unknown as the investigation continues into quite possibly the closest call ever during an American-led spacewalk. NASA has suspended all U.S. spacewalks until the problem is resolved. The Russians, meanwhile, will stage their second spacewalk in under a week, this Thursday, to prepare for the arrival of a new lab by the end of this year. The two countries' suits are completely different. More than a month has passed since the July 16 spacewalk, and it's given Parmitano time to reflect on the dangers surrounding him. The first-time space flier will return to Earth in November.
"Space is a harsh, inhospitable frontier and we are explorers, not colonisers," he wrote. "The skills of our engineers and the technology surrounding us make things appear simple when they are not, and perhaps we forget this sometimes. "Better not to forget." ___ Online: European Space Agency: NASA:
http://blogs.esa.int/luca-parmitano/
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/
station/main/index.html
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