Spacewalkers fix robotic arm in time to grab next cargo ship
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With just a few weeks before the next cargo ship reaches the International Space Station (ISS), two American astronauts finished crucial repairs to the robotic arm on Friday, NASA said.
NASA's Joe Acaba and Randy Bresnik put the finishing touches on repairs to the 57-foot (17-meter)-long Canadian made Canadarm 2 during a marathon six-hour-and-49-minute spacewalk.
The arm has been a key piece of equipment at the orbiting outpost for 16 years, but in August it lost its ability to grip effectively.
Astronauts inside the station maneuver the external arm to latch on to incoming spaceships that are packed with food and supplies for the rotating crew of six living in low-Earth orbit. It is also used to move equipment and people around outside the space station.
The next US supply shipment, delivered on an unmanned Cygnus cargo ship launched by Orbital ATK, is expected to arrive November 13.
NASA astronauts Randy Bresnik (foreground, with red stripes) and Mark Vande Hei work to install a replacement latching end effector on the Canadarm 2 robotic arm outside of the International Space Station during a spacewalk, Oct. 5, 2017. /NASA Photo

NASA astronauts Randy Bresnik (foreground, with red stripes) and Mark Vande Hei work to install a replacement latching end effector on the Canadarm 2 robotic arm outside of the International Space Station during a spacewalk, Oct. 5, 2017. /NASA Photo

In a rush to get the repairs done before then, NASA organized a rapid-fire succession of three spacewalks in three weeks: October 5, October 10 and October 20.
During Friday's outing, astronauts replaced a poorly focusing camera system at the end of the robotic arm, which is necessary to get a good view of the approaching cargo ships, and fixed a fuse on the robotic arm's extension called Dextre.
They also installed another new high definition video camera outside the ISS.
The robotic arm's hand, officially called the latching end effector, was replaced during the October 5 spacewalk.
Astronauts lubricated the arm on the October 10 spacewalk, and a new high definition video camera was also installed outside the research lab.
NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei works outside of the International Space Station during the last spacewalk, Oct. 10, 2017. /NASA Photo

NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei works outside of the International Space Station during the last spacewalk, Oct. 10, 2017. /NASA Photo

Friday's spacewalk was the 205th in the history of the space station, an international collaboration involving more than a dozen countries.
There have been 10 spacewalks so far this year to repair and maintain the ISS, with nine outings by NASA and one by Russian cosmonauts.
Bresnik, 50, a former Marine Corps aviator who goes by the nickname "Komrade," has led all three of the October spacewalks, and made his fifth career excursion outside the space station Friday.
His colleague Acaba, 50, is the first person of Puerto Rican heritage to become an astronaut, according to his NASA biography.
The former hydro-geologist and educator became an astronaut in 2004 and spacewalked twice in 2009 during the space shuttle era.
Source(s): AFP