NASA astronauts Peggy Whitson and DubbedJack Fischer are preparing for a hastily-scheduled spacewalk to repair a faulty part on the International Space Station (ISS).
The "contingency spacewalk," which will take place on Tuesday morning, is aimed at removing and replacing a part known as the Multiplexer-Demultiplexer (MDM), which failed on Saturday morning. The cause of the failure is not known, NASA said in a blog post on Sunday.
SEE ALSO: Astronauts take epic 200th spacewalk outside the International Space StationWhile this is not an emergency situation — no lives are at risk on the Space Station as a result of the outage — but having backup systems is critical to the operation of the orbiting laboratory. The MDM is used to keep solar arrays, radiators, and other systems functioning properly.
"The other MDM in the truss is functioning perfectly, providing uninterrupted telemetry routing to the station’s systems. The crew has never been in any danger, and the MDM failure, believed to be internal to the box itself, has had no impact on station activities," NASA said.
Whitson, who is the current ISS commander, will replace the failed MDM with a spare unit, while Fischer will install communications antennas on an another station component, which was a leftover to-do item after a May 12 spacewalk.
This will be Commander Whitson’s 10th spacewalk, according to NASA, and will likely move her up into third place for cumulative spacewalking time.
Fischer, by contrast, will be making his second spacewalk when he steps out into the void on Tuesday.
This particular part will be quite familiar to Whitson, since on March 30, she and astronaut Shane Kimbrough conducted a spacewalk to install it, complete with upgraded software, NASA said.
The space agency will air the spacewalk beginning at 6:30 a.m. ET on its website and NASA-TV.
The Part About the Helmets by Sadie SteinThe Knight’s Tale, and Other News by Sadie SteinWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for June 29Dolly Parton, Our Lady of Free Books, and Other News by Sadie Stein'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for June 28No, antifa did not invade the Capitol today, despite what Trump supporters sayHow to fight carArnold Schwarzenegger's childhood tale ties Trump fervor to NazismWhere’s Leo? by Lindsay GellmanOnline hate on a record3 Stories of God: 5, 6, and 7 by Joy WilliamsTatiana Salem Levy, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Matteo PericoliTwitter's API keeps breaking, even for developers paying $42,000Books on the Floor, and Other News by Sadie SteinStone to the Bone: On Ray Harryhausen by Dave TompkinsThe internet celebrates Trump's Twitter suspension with snarky memesTikTok Now, the BeReal clone you never used, is being discontinued2 Stories of God: 62 and 70 by Joy WilliamsRazer's 'smart mask' concept looks like covidHow to prove whether one dose of a COVID Photos of the horrific Iowa storm that few noticed Some U.S. Huawei users won't be able to update their phones anymore The world has come up with the worst names for Crayola's new color This chill gorilla loves baby animal videos like the rest of us The 9 best '90s movies on Netflix to like totally stream Facebook prevents sharing links to viral 'Plandemic' conspiracy sequel Why Death Valley’s 130 Fahrenheit heat record matters Little Tasmanian devil experiencing snowfall is hardly what you'd call evil Trump gives TikTok's owner 90 days to get out of the U.S. TikTok launches website to fight misinformation about the company Justin Trudeau forgot a whole province during his Canada Day speech Donald Trump spent 1/5 of his presidency playing golf, according to least surprising report ever GOP senator compares health care to porcupine sex because nothing matters anymore Ring in Canada Day with Trudeau's best moments (and forget about Trump for a while) The bold suffragists you likely didn’t learn about in school ZTE's new Axon 20 5G smartphone will have an under Over 20,000 people lit up a park to celebrate pride Elon Musk is now the fourth richest person in the world Naughty penguins at this aquarium are shamed on a sign How to protect your mail