Spacesuit Released; Students to Track It
 
>From Associated Press
February 03, 2006 7:29 PM EST 
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The crew of the international space station 
shoved an unmanned spacesuit stuffed with discarded clothing and 
radio equipment out the door Friday, creating a ghostly scene that 
resembled a cosmonaut tumbling away from the orbiting outpost.

Complete with helmet and gloves, the spacesuit floated past the 
Russian section of the space station, 220 miles above Earth, before 
rotating away feet first and beginning its orbit around the globe.

"Goodbye, Mr. Smith," Russian flight engineer Valery Tokarev said, 
giving the figure a nickname as he and U.S. commander Bill McArthur 
began a six-hour spacewalk to perform maintenance and photography 
tasks.

The Russian suit was equipped with a radio transmitter that will send 
recorded messages in six languages to amateur radio operators for 
several days before eventually re-entering Earth's atmosphere and 
burning up, NASA officials said.

The spacesuit project, known as SuitSat-1, was the brainchild of a 
Russian ham radio operator. It will send several words in code for 
schoolchildren listening on the ground. Radio operators will be able 
to pick up the messages by tuning into FM frequency 145.990 MHz.

Along with the radio transmitter, the stuffed spacesuit also has 
internal sensors to monitor temperature and battery power. As it 
floats along, it will transmit its temperature, battery power and 
time it has been in space to the ground.

Students and others can also follow its progress on a NASA Web site. 
The suit is expected to pass over the U.S. between midnight and 4 
a.m. according to NASA.

"We expect the ham radio operators on the ground to be able to 
receive the suit signal for several days," said Kwatsi Alibaruho, 
flight director for the spacewalk at NASA's Johnson Space Center in 
Houston.

During Friday's spacewalk, Tokarev and McArthur were scheduled to 
cover a wide swath of the 240-foot-wide, 140-foot-long floating 
station as they take on several chores. It will be the fourth 
spacewalk for McArthur and the second for Tokarev.

One of their chores involves taking steps to protect an important 
cable connected to a transporter that moves a platform holding the 
station's robotic arm.

A twin cable which provides power, data and video to the mobile 
transporter was inadvertently cut in December. Mission managers want 
to make sure that does not happen to the remaining cable. The cut 
cable will be repaired at a later time.

The other tasks include creating storage space, retrieving a Russian 
science experiment and photographing handrails, antennas and sensors 
to see how they have held up in space.

"By the conclusion of this (spacewalk), Bill and Valery will have 
traversed to the extreme ends of just about every length of the 
international space station, a rare feat that they are really looking 
forward to," said Anna Jarvis, NASA's spacewalk officer.

---

On the Net:

NASA's Web site on the international space station:

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html



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