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Space ISS

Astronauts Forced To Take Shelter From Space Junk 55

An anonymous reader writes: Three astronauts living at the International Space Station were forced to scramble to safety Thursday after a "close pass" by flying Russian space debris. The men decamped into the Soyuz spacecraft, which is attached to the orbiting station, while a chunk of an old Russian weather satellite passed 1.5 miles away. Flight engineer Scott Kelly tweeted: "Happy there was no impact. Great coordination with international ground teams. Excellent training."
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Astronauts Forced To Take Shelter From Space Junk

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Was this made up by the submitter? It's nowhere to be found in the article.

  • Really? They scrambled to safety... in space?
    • Scramble:
      1. To move or climb hurriedly, especially on the hands and knees.
      2. To struggle or contend frantically in order to get something: scrambled for the best seats.

      What caught me was that they scrambled to safety to a Soyuz.

    • by MattGWU ( 86623 )

      Yep, frantic bongo music...the rug bunched up behind them. It was a textbook scramble.

  • by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @01:37AM (#50126345)

    Why are there only three astronauts on the ISS right now rather than six? Are we between crew rotations right now?

  • I JUST finished watching the movie Gravity about 5 minutes ago.

  • I am sure they must have radar on the ISS that can show and track incoming junk so they don't have to hide if somthing passes 1.5miles away. If they take refeuge in the Soyuz spacecraft what would happen if that was hit instead of the ISS
    • by MouseR ( 3264 )

      It's all ground based.

    • A Soyuz spacecraft has a significantly surface area than the rest of the ISS so the chance of being hit is significantly smaller
      • *significantly smaller area
      • I suspect there's also the issue of durability and mutual shading. And ISS being large enough that no single part (or at least very few of them) is critical for survival.
        • They have space suits* on the Soyuz, so when the whole thing is opened to space by a large hole made by space rocks, they can close off the depressurized model and repressurize the rest of the station. *At least those orange survival suits used for mitigating loss-of-pressure accidents on takeoff and landing.
  • It's a fairly routine activity for them to hunk down on passing debris. I remember a story a few years ago when they actually had to do this for a fleck of paint about 1cm in size.

    They're trained for these and it probably happens a lot more than we know.

  • What was the Space Junk doing with the shelter in the first place? And what forced the astronauts to take it away?

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