NASA astronauts complete spacewalk which was postponed due to debris risk
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- Thomas MarshburnAmerican physician and NASA astronaut
- Kayla BarronAmerican astronaut
Two NASA astronauts completed an hours-long spacewalk on Thursday morning that was earlier postponed due to a risk of space debris.
Astronauts Thomas Marshburn and Kayla Barron left the hatch at 6:15 a.m. EST and successfully conducted a spacewalk that lasted 6 hours and 32 minutes to replace a faulty antenna.
The duo replaced "a degrading SASA unit with a spare onboard," NASA tweeted.
The spacewalk ended at 12:47 p.m. EST with both the astronauts back in the hatch.
The astronauts also conducted "get-ahead tasks" during their spacewalk, NASA tweeted.
“It was awesome!” Astronauts Kayla Barron and @AstroMarshburn concluded today’s spacewalk at 12:47pm ET (17:47 UTC). The duo replaced a faulty antenna and did some get-ahead tasks for future spacewalks: https://t.co/oKOxFXzoic pic.twitter.com/OLxgF7gTVn
— NASA (@NASA) December 2, 2021
"It was awesome," Barron said about the first spacewalk of her career.
The spacewalk was scheduled for Tuesday morning but was delayed hours before the stipulated start time after NASA got a "debris notification."
The source of the debris has not been confirmed yet.
MORE: NASA delays International Space Station spacewalk over debris risk
This spacewalk marked the 245th spacewalk for NASA and was a part of Expedition 66, a seven-member crew that will be in space till March 2022. It was Marshburn's fifth spacewalk, NASA said.
NASA astronauts complete spacewalk which was postponed due to debris risk originally appeared on abcnews.go.com