CAPE
CANAVERAL, Fla. – The crew of the International Space Station will get a
go-ahead next week to perform spacewalking inspections as part of a probe into
back-to-back ballistic re-entries by Russian Soyuz spacecraft.
Two veteran cosmonauts,
meanwhile, say the type of steep trajectories flown by consecutive Soyuz crews
are safe-but-rocky
rides back to Earth.
"Imagine you drive a
luxury car with fine shock absorbers, not feeling the road at all," said
Pavel Vinogradov, who served on Russia's Mir space station and commanded an
expedition to the new outpost.
"And then suddenly,
one of the shock absorbers breaks and you start feeling all the dents and
unevenness of the road," he said. "It doesn't mean that your life is
in danger. You can still safely drive the car."
A Russian
commission aims to pinpoint the cause of the re-entry difficulties. In
October and in April, Soyuz crew capsules did not separate cleanly from attached
propulsion modules prior to re-entering the atmosphere on the way to landing in
Kazakhstan.
That type of failure could
cause a Soyuz to plunge with its hatch, rather than its heat shield, facing
forward – a lethal situation with re-entry temperatures up to 3,000 degrees.
"Probably the thing
that concerns us the most is that the instrumentation and propulsion section
did not separate correctly from the spacecraft," NASA space operations
chief Bill Gerstenmaier said.
Similar trouble almost
incinerated a Soyuz during a January 1969 re-entry with cosmonaut Boris Volynov
onboard.
NASA is
concerned because the Soyuz will be the only spacecraft capable of flying
to and from the station after the 2010 retirement of its shuttle fleet. The
spacecraft also double as emergency lifeboats at the outpost.
A ballistic re-entry is one
in which the spacecraft relies solely on atmospheric drag to slow the vehicle.
The U.S. and the former Soviet Union relied on the mode for early human
spaceflight. Yuri Gagarin and others flying Vostok spacecraft made ballistic
re-entries. So did John Glenn and the rest of the Mercury astronauts. Gemini,
Apollo and Soyuz capsules were designed to use aerodynamic lift for more
gradual descents that reduce high gravitational forces on crews.
The ballistic mode serves
as a backup for the Soyuz. Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev says the capability shows
the Soyuz design is sound and robust.
Krikalev, who logged 803
days in space and holds the world record for most time tallied in orbit, said
it guarantees that Soyuz will land intact.
That's not to say the ride
won't be sensational.
The Expedition
16 crew encountered forces eight times normal gravity during a ballistic
re-entry on April 19. That's almost triple the 3 G's astronauts experience on
shuttles.
The trajectory increased
the rate of deceleration and pressed American
astronaut Peggy Whitson and her crewmates into custom-molded seats,
crushing their lungs, making it hard to breathe.
"I saw 8.2 G's on the
meter and it was pretty, pretty dramatic," Whitson said. She called it
"an interesting ride."
Soyuz spacecraft comprise
three sections.
An orbital module at the
front end is equipped with rendezvous and docking systems. A central capsule is
known as the descent module; crews strap into its seats for launch and landing.
The back of the spacecraft
is an instrumentation and propulsion module. Its contents include steering
thrusters and guidance systems.
Investigators think
explosive bolts failed to separate the crew capsules and the propulsion modules
on the last two missions.
The Soyuz is designed so
aerodynamic forces will break the modules apart in any case. But engineers
still fear a hatch-first re-entry.
Cosmonauts Sergei Volkov
and Oleg Kononenko will venture outside the station July 10 to inspect the
bolts on the Soyuz now moored at the outpost.
Gerstenmaier said
investigators are making good progress.
"I've made one trip to
Russia to go understand how they are progressing with the analysis. They were
very open with me. They showed me all the data. They showed me the
drawings," he said.
"I saw the physical
hardware. I went through a detailed discussion of their engineering processes;
they are the same as ours."
Bottom line: "It's not
easy flying in space."
Yuri Karash contributed to this report from Moscow.
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