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André Kuipers' diary - Part 10: Training in Houston II



 
 
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Old February 25th 04, 10:23 PM
Jacques van Oene
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Default André Kuipers' diary - Part 10: Training in Houston II

André Kuipers' diary - Part 10: Training in Houston II


12 - 18 February My second week here at the Johnson Space Center was mainly
devoted to the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG) and the two experiments
that I am going to carry out inside it. MSG belongs to ESA; it was built
under Dutch supervision and now sits in the American section of the Station.
You insert your hands into rubber gloves to work in a sort of miniature
laboratory. It is an enclosed box from which hazardous gases cannot escape.

Because the experiments require a lot of preparation and numerous
procedures, we have trained for every aspect, from getting the timeline and
procedures from the computer in the morning, to performing the experiments
and then putting them back into storage. There was also a simulation
involving the various ground stations. A camera allowed ESA in the
Netherlands to watch 'over my shoulder', as it were. This kind of training
is very useful. A lot of the jigsaw pieces are falling into place, and it
really gives me confidence that the mission will be successful.

E-mail

Earlier this week, I trained with all the communication equipment and the
computer systems that I must be able to operate. From the Space Station you
can talk to the ground bases at Houston and Huntsville and with the
operations centre in Moscow, where some of my ESA colleagues are based.
While off duty, you can call home by telephone or log into the computer to
send e-mail. Receiving e-mail is a bit more complicated. Before I go up, I
have to give NASA a list of e-mail addresses, and I can only receive e-mail
from the people on the list. Otherwise, of course, everyone in the world
would be able to send me a message.

The computer can also display a map of the world, showing the exact location
that the Space Station is currently flying over, and where its flight path
will take it. This will be very handy later when I am establishing radio
contact with schools in the Netherlands for one of the experiments. An
extension cable has been connected to the radio equipment, and now I can
look out of the window at the Netherlands as I speak to them... as long as
it is not covered by clouds...



Filming

There is a lot of photographic and video equipment on board the Space
Station. I learned how to use the American cameras this week. We record the
experiments and the flight itself, both for the public and for scientists. I
film quite often for myself, so I am already familiar with much of the
technology. I use my video camera in the Space Station training modules. I
call it my 'external memory'. When training has ended, I run through
everything again making a recording with my video camera. Then I watch it
later; sometimes before doing the same training exercise again, sometimes
just for an hour in bed. It keeps everything fresh in my memory.


I have also had meetings with my managers and colleagues this week. First
there was a meeting with NASA, about the future and whether everything is
going OK. We talked about all sorts of things, such as what happens after
the landing. I already knew many of the people through my work. One of them
was the chief of the NASA office at Star City. I met another during the
landing of my European colleague, Pedro Duque, and a third had been the
Shuttle pilot on the first mission that I was involved in as a project
scientist.


'Inside stories'

Afterwards, I had all kinds of informal meetings with my fellow astronauts.
Léopold Eyharts, for example, who flew to the Mir space station in 1998, and
Roberto Vittori, who made a similar flight to mine in 2002. I was keen to
hear their 'inside stories' - stories from people who have been in the same
boat as I will soon be in. We talked about practical matters, such as
privacy, the toilet and what happens if you are ill. And those wet towels
that you wash with in the Zarya module: what do you do with them when you
have finished? These were matters that had only been touched on during
training. I found out that the towels, for example, have to be hung out to
dry first because water is very precious and you want to recycle it via the
closed system on board.


One presentation that went into great detail was about the medical
equipment. There is an awful lot of it, from a defibrillator to injections
and from dental equipment to stitches. A complete hospital in space, you
might say. If necessary, we have to be able to pull a tooth, deal with an
asthma attack or carry out resuscitation. The equipment will probably never
be used (and we certainly hope so), but it is excellent nevertheless.



Mission Control

The last activity on Friday was a visit to Mission Control. There I was told
about how all activities on the Station are controlled from the ground here
in Houston. Its good to have an idea of what it looks like here and meet
some of the people I will speak to from space.


Party

On Friday evening last week there was a party to celebrate the fact that the
present crew has been in the Station for 100 days. As 'prime crew', we were
naturally invited.

I spent the weekend with my two daughters. They thought it was wonderful to
see way of life here in Texas - cowboy hats, pickup trucks and neon
advertisements. They also accompanied me for two dinner appointments. One
was with my old crewmates, Leroy Chiao, Bill McArthur en Valeri Tokarev.
That was really enjoyable.


Later we dined with my present crewmates, Fincke and Padalka, and the
reserve crew consisting of Sharipov, Chiao and Thiele, together with all
their families. Looking around, we counted eight different nationalities in
all - American, Russian, Dutch, German, Chinese, Swedish and even Indian and
Uzbek. Fantastic! And very typical of the international cooperation that we
see in the International Space Station.



--
---------------------------

Jacques :-)

www.spacepatches.info




 




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