The International Space Station Expedition 70 Kick Starts Its First Full Week
Category Space Wednesday - October 4 2023, 08:26 UTC - 1 year ago The International Space Station Expedition 70 crew is starting their first full week following the previous crew's departure at 371 days. The crew kicked off the week with science, physics, and space suit discussion. NASA Flight Engineers Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O'Hara worked with JAXA astronaut Satoshi Furukawa on health and safety matters in space. Experienced cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko set up a video camera for plasma physics experiment. Cosmonauts Konstantin Borisov and Nikolai Chub studied medical and engineering operations.
The International Space Station Expedition 70 crew is beginning its first full week together following last week’s departure of the station’s longest-serving crew at 371 days. The seven orbital outpost residents kicked off Monday with human research and space physics, as well as spacesuit work and life support maintenance.
NASA Flight Engineer Jasmin Moghbeli started her day setting up the Echo ultrasound system in the Columbus laboratory module for the Vascular Aging study. She scanned her neck, leg, and heart with support from ground personnel to help doctors understand accelerated aging-like symptoms that occur in a crew member’s arteries while living in space. Moghbeli also worked on station hardware as she set up a lighting system that will be placed outside the Kibo laboratory module in the vacuum of space.
Eye checks were also on the schedule as NASA Flight Engineer Loral O’Hara examined the eyes of JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut Satoshi Furukawa using standard medical imaging gear. Doctors are studying how weightlessness affects the retina, the shape of the eye, vision, and other properties to ensure good optical health in space.
O’Hara also joined Commander Andreas Mogensen of ESA (European Space Agency) servicing spacesuits in the Quest airlock. The duo took turns cleaning cooling loops inside the suits before O’Hara finalized the work and recharged suit water tanks and refilled cooling and ventilation garments. Furukawa studied procedures that he will use soon to help astronauts suit up in support of upcoming spacewalks.
Veteran cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, on his fifth space station mission, set up a video camera for a plasma physics experiment in the Columbus lab. The space physics study observes low-temperature gaseous mixtures composed of ionized gas, neutral gas, and micron-sized particles, or plasma crystals, and may improve microgravity research methods and spacecraft designs.
Roscosmos cosmonaut Konstantin Borisov began his morning by strapping sensors to himself for a 24-hour session measuring his cardiac activity and blood pressure. Afterward, he photographed battery cables in the Nauka science module and then moved on to orbital plumbing duties. Cosmonaut Nikolai Chub connected cables to an optical telescope with a radio detector, checked battery temperatures and connections in the Zvezda service module, and finally cleaned the Rassvet module’s ventilation system.
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