Expedition 73 underway on ISS, crew perform spacewalk
Date:
Fri, 02 May 2025 20:49:33 +0000
Description:
With Expedition 73 now underway, the International Space Station is hosting  seven crewmembers again. Thursday The post Expedition 73 underway on ISS, 
crew perform spacewalk appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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With Expedition 73 now underway, the International Space Station is hosting  seven crewmembers again. Thursday saw the astronauts complete the Stations  third spacewalk of the year. The ISS crew is also getting ready for the  upcoming arrival of the commercial Axiom-4 mission as well as conducting the  usual science and maintenance tasks. 
 
 Visiting Vehicles 
The latest series of crew handovers on ISS started in March with the launch 
of the Crew-10 mission aboard SpaceXs Dragon Endurance followed by Crew-9s  return to Earth aboard Freedom . Soyuz MS-27 launched on April 8 from the  Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, docking with the Russian segments Prichal  module just over three hours after liftoff. Its crew: commander Sergey  Ryzhikov, flight engineer Alexey Zubritsky, and NASA astronaut Jonny Kim  boarded the Station just over half an hour after the docking. 
After the Russian segments handover period, Soyuz MS-26 undocked at 21:57 UTC  on April 19. Its departure marked the end of Expedition 72 , with Expedition  73  commanded by JAXAs Takuya Onishi  beginning as MS-26 backed away from the  Stations Rassvet module. The crew currently aboard the Station consists of  Onishi, Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, Jonny Kim, Sergey Ryzhikov, Alexey  Zubritsky, and Kirill Peskov. Soyuz MS-26 about to touch down on the Kazakh  steppe after 220 days in space. (Credit: NASA) 
Soyuz MS-26 and its crew, commander Aleksey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner of  Roscosmos along with NASAs Don Pettit, landed safely in Kazakhstan at 01:20  UTC on April 20 after 220 days in space. Pettit celebrated his 70th birthday  on the day of the landing, though he acknowledged that he needed some time to  recover from encountering Earths gravity for the first time in over seven  months. See Also Expedition 73 updates ISS section NSF Store Click here to  Join L2 
A few days into Expedition 73, the Station received an important cargo  delivery in the form of the CRS-32 mission, utilizing Cargo Dragon C209 on 
its fifth flight. This launched on Monday, April 21 at 08:15 UTC and docked 
to the zenith port on the Harmony module at 12:40 UTC the following day. 
The significance of CRS-32, which was loaded with 3,021 kg of cargo including  food, science experiments, and other supplies, was increased by the  cancellation of Northrop Grummans NG-22 mission. The Cygnus cargo ship that  was to have flown NG-22 incurred during shipping to Port Canaveral ahead of a  planned midyear launch. NG-23, due to lift off later this year, will be the  next Northrop Grumman cargo mission to the ISS. CRS-32 approaching the ISS on  April 22, 2025. (Credit: NASA) 
Some science had to be taken off CRS-32 to be replaced by additional food  supplies to keep the Station stocked after hosting an increased crew of nine  astronauts for a few months last year. The additional food included 1,262  tortillas, which are used in place of bread aboard ISS to reduce the  possibility of floating crumbs that could get into equipment. 
Despite these changes to its cargo manifest, CRS-32 still delivered 255 kg of  scientific equipment and experiments. These included six instruments to  measure solar radiation, an instrument to obtain imagery of the Earth, as 
well as remote sensing, astrophysics, and materials exposure experiments. Two  atomic clocks also were flown to the Station which will be mounted on an  external pallet on the Columbus module. 
Crew Dragon Endurance is currently docked at Harmonys forward port, with  CRS-32 at its zenith port. Soyuz MS-27 is docked to the Prichal module on the  Russian segment, while the Russian Progress MS-29 cargo craft is docked to 
the Poisk module. Illustration of the current visiting vehicles at the ISS.  (Credit: NASA) 
Progress MS-30 is docked at the Zvezda aft docking port, which enables it to  conduct periodic burns to reboost the Space Stations orbit. The Progress  spacecraft was also used to conduct a debris avoidance maneuver on Wednesday,  April 30, to increase the Stations distance from debris associated with a  Chinese Chang Zheng launch vehicle that flew in 2005. 
 US EVA-93 
 Following the resumption of US Orbital Segment (USOS) spacewalks in January 
, the first EVA of Expedition 73 took place on Thursday, May 1. EVA-93, which  was originally supposed to take place last year before issues developed with  the Shuttle-era Extravehicular Mobility Units (EMU) that forced a halt to 
USOS spacewalks for months, started at 13:05 UTC. EVA-93 by the numbers.  (Credit: NASA) 
EVA-93 was performed by NASA astronauts Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers.  McClain wore the suit with the red stripes as EV1, while Ayers was EV2 
without stripes. EVA-93s main tasks were to install a modification kit for 
the future installation of International Space Station Roll-out Solar Array  (iROSA) solar panels at the 2A location on the port sides P4 truss as well as  the relocation of the Common Communications for Visiting Vehicle (C2V2)  communications antenna boom. 
After being assisted by Takuya Onishi and Jonny Kim; McClain and Ayers  officially began EVA-93 when their spacesuits were transitioned to internal  power, but only after Mission Control evaluated minor damage to one of  McClains gloves. After exiting the Quest airlock, they translated to the 
iROSA modification kit work site with McClain holding a tool bag and Ayers  carrying a 2.5-meter-long bag carrying struts. McClain was told to perform  additional glove checks during the EVA. Illustration of the iROSA 
modification kit installation. (Credit: NASA) 
The iROSA modification kit consists of a triangle formed by two small struts  and a mounting bracket, with four larger struts connected to this. The  astronauts installed the triangle and the right lower and mid struts as well  as multi-layer insulation on the middle strut to help protect them against  temperature swings and debris impacts. The astronauts also rolled out  electrical wiring for the iROSA arrays to be installed on a future spacewalk. 
There have been six prior installations of the iROSA modification kit, and  McClain and Ayers were trained on this task on the ground in Houston. After  the array installation at the 2A location, the final iROSA modification kit  will be installed in a future EVA at the 3B location on the S6 truss on the  starboard side of the Station. By the time the ISS ends its career, all eight  solar array locations will have iROSA panels along with their original,  degraded solar arrays. Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers performing the  relocation of an antenna during EVA-93. (Credit: NASA) 
The iROSA kit installation was not completed during Thursdays spacewalk, with  Mission Control electing to have the astronauts move to the higher-priority  task of relocating the C2V2 antenna boom instead. The EVA was at the 
two-hour, 30-minute mark when this decision was taken. Installation of the  left-mid and lower struts will be left for a future spacewalk. At this point  in the EVA, McClains consumables were the limiting factor for its duration,  with a total of six hours and 30 minutes available. 
The astronauts moved to the P3 truss, also on the port side of the Station, 
to begin the work of relocating the C2V2 antenna boom. They shifted the boom  by about 46 cm (18 in) and mounted it onto an extension, clearing a 
structural blockage that affected one of the antennas during a previous  rendezvous with a Cygnus cargo spacecraft. Illustration of the C2V2 antennae.  (Credit: NASA) 
The C2V2 assembly, which features two antennae, is used to communicate with  visiting vehicles, and moving the antenna will help support future visitors,  including Cygnus NG-23 and Japans first HTV-X mission later this year. After  the C2V2 relocation was complete, the astronauts returned to the airlock and  the spacewalk ended after five hours and 44 minutes, at 18:49 UTC. It had  originally been scheduled for six and a half hours. 
During EVA 93, Diana Trujillo served as the spacewalk flight director in  Mission Control. Astronaut Marcos Berrios was the spacewalk communicator and  Sandy Moore was the capsule communicator, or CAPCOM. Faruq Sabur, Lucas  Widner, Bailey Vega, and Steven Vilano were also part of the EVA-93 team at  the control center in Houston. 
EVA-93 was Anne McClains third spacewalk and Nichole Ayers first. McClains 
two previous spacewalks lasted a total of 13 hours and eight minutes. This 
was the 275th spacewalk in support of ISS assembly, maintenance, and upgrades  as well as the fifth EVA to be carried out by only female astronauts. Axiom-4  crew portrait. (Credit: Axiom Space) 
 Upcoming Activities 
The Station will receive its next visitors later in May. The  privately-operated Axiom-4 mission is currently scheduled for liftoff on  Thursday, May 29 aboard a new Crew Dragon spacecraft. Crew Dragon C213, the  fifth Crew Dragon to fly with people aboard, will be making its first flight  and the Axiom-4 crew will get the honor of naming this spacecraft. 
Axiom-4 is commanded by Peggy Whitson, a former NASA astronaut and ISS  veteran. Whitson is the only US astronaut and the only spaceflight veteran on  the Axiom-4 crew. Indias Shubhanshu Shukla, Polands Slawosz Usnanski, and  Hungarys Tibor Kapu will also be aboard, with Shukla and Usnanski the first 
of their nationalities to visit the ISS. Usnanski is an ESA astronaut, while  Shukla will be the first of Indias new astronaut corps to fly into space. 
Other Axiom missions to the ISS have spent between nine and 21 days in space,  with Axiom-4 scheduled to last two to three weeks. After C213s return to  Earth, no other visiting vehicles are scheduled to fly to the Station until  Progress MS-31 arrives in July. Cygnus NG-22 was supposed to have flown 
within this timeframe, but its cancellation created urgency for a successful  CRS-32 flight. Expedition 73 commander Takuya Onishi is seen working on the  Advanced Space Processor Experiment-4 for a biotechnology study. (Credit:  NASA) 
The Expedition 73 crew has been busy this month with spacewalk preparations,  maintenance activities, and various experiments including the ones recently  sent up aboard CRS-32. An experiment to create DNA-like nanomaterials is  operating in the Japanese Kibo module, while an ultrasound machine has been  used to image crewmembers blood vessels. 
Many other experiments are being conducted on both the USOS and the Russian  segment of the Station, ranging from an investigation into how cells detect  gravity, research on cognition in space, photography of glaciers, and 
research in other disciplines. While the Expedition 73 crew is working in  space, NASA is preparing to mark the 25th anniversary of continuous human  occupation of the ISS in November. 
( Lead image: NASA astronaut Anne McClain during her recent spacewalk. 
Credit: NASA) 
 
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https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/05/iss-eva-93-expedition-73/
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