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SPACE TRAVEL
Russian Space Cameras on ISS May Replace US Models in 2018
by Staff Writers
Moscow (Sputnik) Aug 21, 2017


"The next spacewalk is scheduled for January, 2018 in accordance with Russia's program ... The aim would be to install the broadband communication system on the ISS' surface. A different kind of transmitter would be installed," Kaleri explained.

Russian-made cameras for recording the activities of astronauts in outer space may replace similar US-made models as early as next year, Russia's Rocket and Space Corporation Energia (RSC Energia) said Thursday.

Earlier in the day, a Sputnik correspondent reported from the Russian Mission Control Center (MCC) that two Russian members of the crew of the International Space Station (ISS), Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazansky, ventured outside the orbital outpost for the first time in 18 months.

"Currently the works are underway, the result of the testing will show when they will start operation. There is a possibility that we will manage to finish by the next spacewalk or maybe after it," head of Energia's Space Flight Center Alexander Kaleri told reporters.

The space official also said that the next Russia's spacewalk is set to take place in January, 2018. It will be performed in order to install a new broadband communication system on the outside of the orbital station.

"The next spacewalk is scheduled for January, 2018 in accordance with Russia's program ... The aim would be to install the broadband communication system on the ISS' surface. A different kind of transmitter would be installed," Kaleri explained.

The previous Russian spacewalk was carried out by cosmonauts Yuri Malenchenko and Sergey Volkov on February 3, 2016.

Source: Sputnik News

SPACE TRAVEL
SpaceX launches super-computer to space station
Miami (AFP) Aug 14, 2017
SpaceX on Monday blasted off its unmanned Dragon cargo ship toward the International Space Station, carrying a host of science experiments and the most powerful computer ever sent into orbit. "Three, two, one, and liftoff," a SpaceX commentator said as the white Falcon 9 rocket climbed into the blue sky over Cape Canaveral, Florida at 12:31 pm (1631 GMT). Three minutes after launch, the ... read more

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