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Total EVAs: | 9 | ||
Total EVA time: | 37h 36m |
No. | Date | Together with | Time | Main tasks and notes |
1 | 12.05.1995 | G. Strekalov | 6h 15m |
Preparation work for new setting of solar
cells |
2 | 17.05.1995 | G. Strekalov | 6h 42m |
Changing Kristall solar cell to Kvant1
module |
3 | 22.05.1995 | G. Strekalov | 5h 15m |
Folding of the second Kristall solar
cell |
4 | 28.05.1995 | G. Strekalov | 0h 21m |
New setting of the docking adapter |
5 | 01.06.1995 | G. Strekalov | 0h 23m |
New setting of the docking adapter |
6 | 08.10.2001 | M. Tyurin | 4h 58m |
Using first time the new Russian built airlock
and docking port named Pirs, which docked on the Zvezda module since September
2001 |
7 | 15.10.2001 | M. Tyurin | 5h 52m |
Mounting a variety of instruments outside the
Zvezda service module |
8 | 12.11.2001 | F. Culbertson | 5h 04m |
Connecting seven cables between Zvezda service
module and Pirs docking module and take photos |
9 | 03.12.2001 | M. Tyurin | 2h 46m |
Cutting away a rubbery O-ring seal that was
preventing an unmanned cargo freighter from properly docking to the
complex |
Russia and the U.S. define
EVA
differently. Russian cosmonauts are said to perform
EVA
any time they are in vacuum in a space suit. A U.S. astronaut must have at
least his head outside his spacecraft before he is said to perform an
EVA. |