HOUSTON --
A unplanned
spacewalk by two shuttle
astronauts to force stubborn
solar array into submission atop the International Space
Station (ISS) Monday made for high drama at NASA's Mission Control here at
the Johnson Space Center.
"'Wow,' is
about the only thing I can say," Kirk Shireman, NASA's ISS deputy program manager,
said late Monday after the spacewalk's
success. "It was really an emotional rollercoaster today."
European
Space Agency astronaut Christer
Fuglesang and veteran NASA spaceflyer Robert
Curbeam shook, poked, prodded and coaxed a reluctant solar array into its
storage boxes on the station's six-year-old
Port 6 truss during six hours and 38 minutes of orbital work [image].
They worked in concert with flight controllers and their crewmates aboard the
ISS and docked shuttle Discovery.
Snags
between the array's guide wires and metal grommets, or eyelets, called for
Curbeam to employ mostly improvised tools: a scraper designed to repair shuttle
heat shields, extension bars for loosening sticky ISS bolts and others, all of
which were covered in orange tape to ward off arcs of electricity -- a hazard
when working near the solar wings, NASA said [image
1, image
2].
"Beamer had
us on the edge of our seats," Tricia Mack, NASA's lead spacewalk officer for
the astronaut's STS-116
mission aboard Discovery, told reporters of Curbeam after the spacewalk.
NASA
engineers expected some solar array guide wires to stick, but they didn't
expect it to billow out in loose loops when Curbeam plucked on it to free
grommets.
"There was
a groan, I think people heard that all over the building," Shireman said.
After some
discussion in space and on Earth, Curbeam tugged a bit more on the line and it retracted
back onto its spool.
Mack said
Curbeam, known for keeping a cool head and his quick reaction times, did not disappoint.
He even set a new
record for the number of spacewalks -- four -- performed by a shuttle astronaut
during an orbiter flight, she added.
Curbeam
also jumped from 13th to fifth on the list of all-time spacewalkers
during the latest orbital work, NASA officials said.
"We were
also extremely entertained with Christer using the shake method and counting in
various languages," Mack said.
During the
spacewalk, Fuglesang counted in a variety of languages aside from English --
Spanish and French to name a few -- as he shook the balky solar array.
At one
point, when again asked to shake the solar wing, he mentioned he had run out of
languages. But despite the levity, both spacewalkers were on task, mission
managers said.
Monday's
spacewalk marked the fourth and last for NASA's STS-116
mission aboard the Discovery orbiter and capped a week of ISS
construction and crew change. The shuttle crew is slated to undock aboard
Discovery at 5:09 p.m. EST (2209 GMT) today.
"What a
day," Shireman said.