
EXPEDITION 72 crew members have begun preparing the second spacecraft in 2025 outside the International Space Station to delete communication gears and search for potential microorganisms. The orbital residents also studied advanced space navigation and continued to study microorganisms DNA and investigate future pilot technology.
The station commander, Sni Williams, and the flight engineer Butch Wilmore, on Tuesday, worked under the quest aerock with tethers, stacking bags, and foot restraint. In addition, DUO is used to remove and store the radio frequency group antenna antenna antenna antenna alignment, wipe off the surface of the external station, and review the procedure to test whether microorganisms can live outside the POST base in front of the track. did. They will set a spacecraft on the battery power supply, which means the start of outer space at 8:00 am on Thursday, January 30.
Flight engineer Nick Hague and Don Pettit also participated in preparing for the spaceship. Hague first started when he studied the steps he took when he helped to enter and exit the spaceship, lead the quest inside and outside the quest, monitor duo during the science and maintenance excursion. Later, he participated in Pettit and practiced the installation of a spaceship jet pack used to control the spaceship at an event that was unlikely to be ignored by the spaceship in the front of the track.
Hague and Petits also continued to maintain advanced research that would benefit people who enter the earth. Hague has installed NAVCOM technology demonstrations in the Columbus LABORORATORY module. Space Navigation Hardware has been tested as a backup solution for a global navigation satellite system that supports future moon missions. Pettit was quickly analyzed and identified the microorganisms living in the water system of the space station by sequence of the DNA of bacterial samples in the Harmony Module maintenance area. GISMOS biotechnology research is important for analyzing to increase the number of DNA research on orbit without returning samples to the earth and protects the health of spacecraft crew.
Alexey Ovchinin, a flight engineer working in the Roscosmos segment in the orbital lab, has been searching for a sensor packing cap, and exploring how to operate a crew to operate spaceships and robots in future planetary missions. Flight engineer Ivan Vagner provided services to electronic equipment hardware in the Zarya module, pulled out the cable and spent a day. Flightsandr Gorbunov, Flightsandr Gorbunov, pointed out a camera using a spectrosometer outside the window of the Zvezda service module, shooting the effects of nature and artificial disasters on the earth with various wavelengths.
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