Unexplained leak from docked Soyuz spacecraft cancels Russian ISS
spacewalk
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[December 15, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -A routine spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts aboard the
International Space Station (ISS) was called off as it was about to
begin after flight controllers noticed a stream of liquid spewing from a
docked Soyuz spacecraft, a NASA webcast showed.
The spray of fluid, which was visible in NASA's live video feed as a
torrent of snowflake-like particles emanating from the rear section of
the Soyuz MS-22 capsule, was described by a NASA commentator as a
coolant leak.
NASA said none of the seven members of the current International Space
Station (ISS) crew - three Russian cosmonauts, three U.S. NASA
astronauts and a Japanese astronaut - was ever in any danger.
The mishap occurred just as two of the cosmonauts, crew commander Sergey
Prokopyev and flight engineer Dimitri Petelin, were suited and preparing
for a planned spacewalk to move a radiator from one module to another on
the Russian segment of the ISS.
An official for Russia's mission control operations near Moscow was
heard telling Prokopyev and Petelin in a radio transmission that their
spacewalk was being canceled while engineers worked to determine the
nature and origin of the leak.
The NASA commentator on the livestream, Rob Navias, broadcasting from
NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, also said the spacewalk was
called off because of the leak, which he said began about 7:45 p.m. EST
(0145 GMT Thursday).
Navias said the Soyuz craft arrived at the space station in September,
bringing Prokopyev, Petelin and U.S. astronaut Frank Rubio to the ISS,
and has remained attached to the Earth-facing side of the orbital
laboratory.
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A stream of particles, which NASA says
appears to be liquid and possibly coolant, sprays out of the Soyuz
spacecraft on the International Space Station, forcing a delay of a
routine planned spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts December 14,
2022 in this still image taken from video. NASA TV/Handout via
REUTERS
The spacewalk planned for Wednesday was postponed once before, in
late November, because of faulty cooling pumps in the cosmonauts'
spacesuits, Navias said.
The spacewalk was to be the 12th this year at the ISS and the 257th
in the history of the 22-year-old platform for assembly, maintenance
and upgrade work, according to NASA.
Navias said it was too soon to know what implications the leak might
have for the integrity of that spacecraft, and whether it might pose
any difficulties for returning crew to Earth at the end of their
mission.
Five other spacecraft are parked at the space station - two SpaceX
capsules (a Crew Dragon and Cargo Dragon), a Northrop Grumman Cygnus
space freighter and two Russian resupply ships, Progress 81 and
Progress 82.
The ISS, spanning the length of a U.S. football field and orbiting
some 250 miles above Earth, has been continuously occupied since
2000, operated by a U.S.-Russian-led partnership that includes
Canada, Japan and 11 European countries.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Joey Roulette in Washington. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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