Space
Station Extravehicular Activity
Working
Outside the International Space Station
 | STS-104
Astronaut James F. Reilly poses for a photo in the Quest Joint
Airlock Module at the completion of the final STS-104 spacewalk,
which was the first conducted from Quest. |
Before the arrival of
the Joint Airlock Module, which is named Quest, on shuttle mission
STS-104, spacewalks conducted
from the space station could only use Russian spacesuits, unless
the space shuttle was present. The Zvezda
Service Module provides a capability for station-based Russian
spacewalks using only Russian spacesuits. The Joint Airlock Module,
which was attached to the station during the 10th space shuttle
assembly flight, gave the station the capability to conduct spacewalks
using U.S. spacesuits.
Quest, which has the
capability to be used by both Russian and U.S. spacesuit designs,
consists of two sections: a "crew lock" that is used to exit the
station and begin a spacewalk and an "equipment lock" used for
storing gear.
The station crew can
also perform spacewalks in Russian Orlan spacesuits from the Russian
Docking Compartment, named Pirs.
 | Astronaut
Daniel Barry wears a training version of the extravehicular
mobility unit (EMU) spacesuit during an underwater
simulation of a spacewalk for the ISS-2A.1
mission. |
Spacewalkers
must wear pressurized spacesuits in order to work in space. These
suits have pressures significantly lower than ambient cabin pressure
of a spacecraft. This makes spacewalkers subject to decompression
sickness, more commonly known as the "bends." Decompression sickness
results from nitrogen bubbles forming in the tissues or blood
stream and moving to other areas of the body. Therefore, spacewalking
crewmembers must perform a pre-breathe protocol, which is designed
to wash out any excess nitrogen from the body, before a spacewalk.
This protocol takes advantage of the fact that exercise increases
the speed at which nitrogen is removed from the body by increasing
blood circulation through the extremities. The ISS pre-breathe
protocol involves breathing pure oxygen for a total of 2 hours
and 20 minutes and includes a short period of high-intensity exercise
at the beginning of the pre-breathe procedure.
Station astronauts
begin the pre-breathe protocol by exercising vigorously on the
space station's cycle ergometer for a total of 10 minutes while
breathing pure oxygen via an oxygen mask. After 50 total minutes
of breathing pure oxygen, including the 10 minutes initially spent
exercising, the pressure in the station's airlock will be lowered
to 10.2 pounds per square inch, or psi. During airlock depressurization,
the spacewalkers will breathe pure oxygen for an additional 30
minutes. At the end of those 30 minutes, with the airlock now
at 10.2 psi, the spacewalkers will put on their space suits. Once
their spacesuits are on, the spacewalkers will breathe pure oxygen
inside the suits for an additional 60 minutes before making final
preparations to leave the station and begin their spacewalk. This
protocol provides a total of 2 hours and 20 minutes of pre-breathe
time, including the 10 minutes of vigorous exercise at the beginning
of the procedure.
With the operational
Joint Airlock Module, the philosophy of spacewalk training will
shift due to the increasing complexity of the station and the
ability of the station crew to perform spacewalks. Rather than
attempting to train station crew members for every EVA task they
may be called upon to perform during a mission, training will
increasingly aim toward providing crew members with a general
suite of EVA skills. The station's growing size and complexity
will make it virtually impossible for astronauts to train for
every possible contingency and maintenance EVA, as is the case
in training for shuttle missions. |