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International Space Station status reportExpedition 11 Crew Expedition 11 Commander Sergei Krikalev and Flight Engineer John Phillips continued routine maintenance and science experiments aboard the International Space Station this week as they wrapped up their first month in space. The crew began the week observing Victory Day the Russian holiday that this year marked the 60th anniversary of the end of fighting in the Soviet Union during World War II. The rest of the week kept Krikalev and Phillips busy with maintenance and research activities. The crew continued using the treadmill for exercise this week as engineers closely monitored data from the exercise sessions. However, after a broken restraint cable was found during a routine inspection today, the crew was asked to use other exercise equipment for the time being. The treadmill stopped working for a time last Friday when a circuit breaker tripped inside the device. During a routine monthly inspection today, Phillips reported a broken restraint cable on the treadmills gyroscope. The treadmill, which is specially outfitted to isolate the vibrations caused by exercise from the rest of the Station, is equipped with a gyroscope to maintain the systems stability. Engineers will analyze photos of the restraint cable to determine if it can cause problems with the treadmills operation. Other exercise equipment aboard that is available to the crew includes two stationary bicycles. The Stations atmosphere was pressurized with oxygen from the ISS Progress 17 vehicles reserve tanks once again this week. The Station's Elektron oxygen generation system, which can convert water into oxygen for the air onboard, is not operating. Russian engineers plan to send a new electronics box for the system on a Progress supply ship that will arrive in June. Plentiful supplies of oxygen remain available aboard the Station from
multiple sources. In total, oxygen supplies already aboard the Station
coupled with those that are planned to be delivered by upcoming cargo
craft could sustain the crew for at least the rest of this year, without Through next week, the remaining oxygen supplies aboard the currently
docked Progress will be used. Once those are depleted, Solid Fuel Oxygen
Generation canisters may be used. 84 such canisters are aboard. Those
canisters alone could supply the crew for at least 42 days if necessary. The Progress spacecraft now docked to the Station, Progress 17, will
undock at about 3:10 p.m. CDT June 15. ISS Progress 18 is scheduled to
launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, at 6:09 p.m. CDT June
16 and dock to Station on at 7:10 p.m. CDT June 18. The Stations This week, both crewmembers worked on preparing excess equipment for return on the Space Shuttle Discovery in July on the STS-114 Return to Flight mission. They also performed routine maintenance on ventilation and life support systems in the Russian segment and verified a VHF radio communications link used during Shuttle rendezvous operations. Krikalev continued work throughout the Russian modules with audits of various supplies and equipment. Phillips work focused on some of the laptop computers aboard. He
refreshed a Portable Computer System (PCS) laptop by deleting and then
reloading information on the hard drive, which recovered its corrupted
hard drive to serve as a backup. The PCS laptops are used by the crew
to Phillips also worked with three Station Support Computers (SSCs) that
were experiencing problems booting up. After the troubleshooting, two
of the computers turned on, but the screens remained blank. They can be
used for routing data in applications where a computer monitor is not Phillips also replaced an old battery in the laptop computer used at the Robotics Work Station that controls the Station robotic arm, Canadarm2. Serving as the NASA Station Science Officer, Phillips began participating in the Journals experiment after completing his orientation to Station life. The investigation records crew members' perceptions though the mission to obtain information to assist in the design of future spacecraft. Phillips also prepared for his first session next week with the Foot/Ground
Reaction Forces During Spaceflight (FOOT) experiment. For the experiment,
he will wear an instrumented garment called the Lower Extremity Monitoring
Suit (LEMS) and shoes with force sensor attached. Information on the crew's activities aboard the Space Station, future launch dates, as well as Station sighting opportunities from anywhere on the Earth, is available on the Internet at: ANS Thanks Arthur, N1ORC, for this info
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