The primary oxygen
generator for the International Space Station (ISS) is drawing more power
than normal to continue working, NASA officials said
today.
ISS flight controllers
instructed the station's current crew, Expedition 10's Leroy Chiao and Salizhan
Sharipov, to ramp up power to the Russian-built Elektron oxygen generator to
keep the recently repaired device functioning.
"At this hour, the Elektron
is up and running at a higher amperage," NASA spokesman Rob Navias said today
during NASA TV's daily ISS commentary.
Instead of drawing its
normal 32 amperes of electric current, the device now relies on a 50-ampere
supply fed by a second power channel from the station's U.S. electrical
system.
The Elektron glitch is more
a nuisance than a danger to the ISS crew since Chiao and Sharipov have more
than a 150 days worth of oxygen readily available from other
sources aboard the orbital outpost. Should the Elektron generator fail
completely, the Expedition 10 crew would still have ample air and oxygen to last
through the arrival of a new Progress cargo ship later this year, Navias
said.
But the time spent this
week repairing the oxygen generator has taken time that the Expedition 10 crew
would have spent on science experiments and other duties. To catch up, they
spent some of today on biomedical experiments and other activities.
Recent repair
history
Tucked in the space
station's Zvezda service module, the Russian-built Elektron device is typically
used as the primary oxygen source for ISS crews.
The device uses the process
of electrolysis to separate water into its component parts of oxygen and
hydrogen, the latter of which is dumped overboard.
The recent Elektron
failure occurred on Jan.
1, 2005, when its primary and backup pumps shut down.
After five days of
fruitless troubleshooting to clear gas bubbles from the system, Sharipov
and ground engineers were able to reactivate the device on Jan. 6 by
swapping the fluid from the Elektron's liquid unit with that from a spare, NASA
officials said. That fix didn't last, however, and the unit's primary and backup
pumps failed throughout the day, they added.
The Elektron has given ISS
flight controllers and previous station crews headaches
as well. It failed
just over one year ago during Expedition 8, then again
during Expedition 9, when commander Gennady Padalka and Michael Fincke were able
to keep the device working intermittently
until the Expedition 10 crew arrived with spare parts to make more repairs.
Complete
Coverage: ISS Expedition 10