NASA
astronaut Bill McArthur has found a set of missing Russian spacesuit air scrubbers
during a weekend search aboard the International Space Station (ISS), the U.S.
space agency said Monday.
McArthur,
who commands the ISS
Expedition 12 mission, discovered the four lithium hydroxide canisters -
which are used to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere of Russian-built
Orlan spacesuits during spacewalks - on Saturday during an off-duty search,
NASA said.
The missing
canisters were tucked behind a panel inside the space station's Russian-built
Zvezda service module. Without them, the ISS astronauts would have not been
able to use Orlan spacesuits, which are tailored for work outside the station's
Russian-built segments, until additional lithium hydroxide units arrived aboard
an automated cargo ship in mid-April.
McArthur's
find came days after NASA
cleared a handrail issue that had barred spacewalks in U.S.-built
spacesuits for about one month. With the handrail issue clear and the missing
air scrubbers now found, McArthur and Expedition 12 flight engineer Valery
Tokarev have regained full spacewalk capabilities aboard the ISS, if needed.
No
spacewalks are currently planned for the remainder of the Expedition 12 crew's
mission. McArthur and Tokarev are slated to return
to Earth on April 8.
Their
replacements, Expedition
13 commander Pavel Vinogradov and flight engineer Jeffrey Williams, will
launch toward the ISS with Brazilian astronaut Marcos
Pontes at on March 29 at 9:30 p.m. EST (0230 GMT). Pontes will return to
Earth with the Expedition 12 astronauts.