Space
station astronaut Dan Tani is drawing on the support of physicians and family
after the unexpected death of his mother this week.
Tani's
90-year-old mother Rose died Wednesday after her car was struck by a train in
his hometown of Lombard, Ill. His wife Jane and a NASA flight surgeon relayed
the tragic news to the astronaut in a private conference, the agency said.
"The
entire NASA family grieves with Dan on the unexpected loss of his mother
yesterday," said Michael Coats, director of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, in a written statement. "We will work to provide Dan and his
family with any assistance that they need during this difficult time."
NASA
spokesperson Kylie Clem told SPACE.com that Tani and his Expedition 16
crewmates - like every space station crew - are assigned their own flight
surgeon and support team.
Guided by
NASA's Flight Surgeon Office at JSC, the team ensures that long-duration
astronauts are healthy and rested for their marathon missions. Astronauts can
also reach out to flight controllers and families vie an Internet protocol
phone, radio and video links, NASA has said.
While Tani
has elected to continue with his daily tasks, his schedule is open for
adjustment should he feel it necessary, Clem said.
"It
can be as flexible as he needs it to be," she added.
The
agency's response is similar to one used to support the space station's
Expedition 6 crew in 2003, when seven astronauts were killed after their shuttle Columbia broke apart
as it reentered the Earth's atmosphere.
Tani can
also look to his crewmates, Expedition
16 commander Peggy Whitson and flight engineer Yuri Malenchenko, Clem
added.
"The
crew that's there, they work together so closely and that does add some
additional support," she said.
Rose Tani's
death occurred one day after her son and Whitson performed
a spacewalk to inspect two malfunctioning joints serving the station's
power-producing solar arrays.
Lost
holiday
Tani, 49, is
making his second career spaceflight and was initially slated to return to Earth
Wednesday after a brief stay aboard the ISS.
But fuel
tank sensor glitches on NASA's space shuttle Atlantis, Tani's ride home, delayed
a planned
December launch until next month. That left Tani stuck aboard the ISS with Whitson
and Malenchenko -- who already planned to spend the holiday in space -- until
Atlantis arrives in mid-January.
"We
knew there was a chance for me being up here for Christmas because of the short
launch window in December," Tani told reporters earlier this week.
"So we mentally prepared for that."
Before
launching to the ISS in October, Tani told reporters that he and his wife made
sure they prepared presents for their daughters Keiko and Lilly just in case a
shuttle flight delay kept him from their Houston home during the holidays.
"My
presents are probably under a tree in Houston," Tani said, adding that his
family may have shipped some smaller items to the space station just in case.
Whitson,
the ever-prepared station commander, said she also made sure to prepare a gift
for Tani should he miss his ride home this month. The astronauts will also hold
a holiday dinner of sorts after rummaging through their pantry for prepackaged
pouches of smoked turkey, cornbread dressing and candied yams.
"We,
on the space station, hope that all our friends and family are doing well, of
course," Tani told reporters this week via a video link. "We are
privileged to live here on the space station and it's hard to call a day in
space a sacrifice."
Space
station managers on Tuesday promised to get Tani home early next year.
"We
kept Dan on board past Christmas," said Mike Suffredini, NASA's space
station program manager, after Tuesday's spacewalk. "We kind of owe it to
him to get him home."