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Mir-25 Mission Interviews
Following are links to interviews that took place
during Mir-25
John Uri, Phase 1 Mission
Scientist - 2/6/98
Andy Thomas, NASA-7 Mir Resident
- 2/13/98
David Wolf, NASA-6 Mir Resident -
2/19/98
Frank Culbertson, Phase 1 Program Manager
- 2/27/98
Neal Pellis, NASA Senior Scientist
- 3/13/98
Alexander Alexandrov, Cosmonaut
- 3/27/98
Alexander Alexandrov, Cosmonaut
- 4/3/98
Jerry Miller, Spacewalk Operations
Officer - 4/10/98
Andy Thomas, NASA-7 Mir Resident
- 4/10/98
Andy Thomas, NASA-7 Mir Resident
- 4/30/98
Frank Culbertson, Phase 1 Program Manager
- 5/22/98
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| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of February 6, 1998
John Uri Reports on Mir Science
John Uri, the Shuttle-Mir Program Mission Scientist, answers more questions
on the human biology and other science of the Shuttle-Mir program.
Question: David Wolf's been home about five days.
How's he feeling now?
Uri: I spoke with Dave earlier to day and he's
in very good spirits. His recovery is going very well. He's taking his
rehabilitation program very seriously. I think it's very important for
him to do that, and I think, psychologically, coming off a very successful
mission really helped with his rehab program. He has spoken with some
of the investigators and has already heard some of the results and I
think that really helps with the process of reacclimatizing himself
back to 1 g.
Question: Learning how the human body responds
to long periods in microgravity is one of the on-going studies of the
Shuttle-Mir science program. Now that you've seen six Americans return
from extended periods in weightlessness, are you able to draw any preliminary
conclusions?
Uri: As Dave implied, being in space for a long
time is a very difficult challenge, and with most physiological challenges
there's a lot of individual variability. We know that all our crew members
came back in good shape and their rehabilitation program was very successful.
We'll obviously need to look at a lot more long-duration crew members
before we can make some very definitive conclusions. The countermeasures
programs we have so far seem to work very well especially for the muscle
and cardiovascular changes. Probably need a little more work in the
area of bone demineralization, and we hope what we've learned from Mir
so far will help us develop those countermeasures on ISS.
Question: Wolf said during interviews on-orbit
last week that he felt he had completed more than 100% of his science
agenda; while it may be too soon to characterize specific results, what's
your grade on the conduct of Wolf's science program, and are there any
areas where you anticipate results which might be quickly turned around
for applications on the International Space Station?
Uri: Operationally, Dave's flight was very successful.
We completed the experiments that we had set out to do. Of course the
investigators are now just getting around to looking at the data so
we'll know in a few weeks or a few months what the data actually look
like. Many of the experiments Dave was doing were continuations from
previous missions to add to our overall sizable database already. Of
course, Andy's continuing some of those. So we'll know in the not too
distant future how successful the experiments really were in terms of
giving us the good data that we all expect.
Question: Andy Thomas is now two weeks into his
tour of duty on the Mir. Give us a preview of the kind of work he's
to do on orbit, including any investigations which are new to his increment.
Uri: Most of the experiments that Andy's doing
are continuations from previous ones to add to our database, particularly
in the biomedical investigations. We like to have as many subjects as
we can, and he's continuing some of those. There are some new experiments
on Andy's flight. One in particular in the continuing series of experiments
in biotechnology looking at tissue cultures. We're looking at how cancer
cells and blood vessel cells interact in zero g. It's very important
for future research. And that in particular, that type of science, will
be continued on the International Space Station. So the things we have
learned from John's flight and Dave's flight, and Andy's flight where
we did those experiments will directly go into redesigning the hardware,
perhaps redesigning the actual experiment we plan to do in that facility.
Question: The French researcher Leopold Eyharts
is conducting a science mission during the three-week handover between
Russian crews. Does Eyharts' work, or even the mere presence of six
people onboard the Mir, have an impact on Thomas' science?
Uri: As you can imagine, having six people on Mir
it's probably very crowded and maybe they bump into each other occasionally,
but we have a good working relationship with the French Space Agency,
we've worked with them for several years now. Working with them and
the Russian timeliners we were able to juggle our science and their
science so that we don't interfere with each other, so I'm not expecting
any problems with having that many people onboard.
Read
John Uri's Oral History
Read
more about Shuttle-Mir Science
|
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Back
to
Mir
Increment
Summaries
|
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| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of February 13, 1998
Andy Thomas Talks About Life on Mir
Toward the conclusion of his first two weeks in space, astronaut Andy
Thomas talked to news media about life on Mir.
Question: You've been up on Mir for approximately
two weeks now. Can you tell us how it's been going and what the adjustment
for you has been like, both personally and professionally?
Thomas: It's been going well. It has been a big
adjustment though. As you can imagine, learning to live and function
on a day-to-day basis permanently in zero gravity is [a big adjustment].
And moving in here is a bit like, if you can imagine, moving into a
new house, and you imagine you have boxes of things all over the floor
and you have to step around them. Well, up here, the problem's a little
different, and that difference is the problem of zero gravity. The boxes
- or in our case bags -- are not just on the floor, they're on the walls,
on the ceiling and floating everywhere, so it was a packing nightmare
for a little while to get everything stowed and to figure out what I
needed to function on a day-to-day basis. But once I'd done that, things
settled down quite well and now I'm getting into a nice routine of life.
Question: There has been some controversy about
you that I'd like to get out of the way. The Mir commander, Talgat Musabayev,
complained that, in his opinion, you don't speak Russian very well.
There were also reports that Russian command was portraying you as a
malcontent because you complained that your space suit didn't fit. Give
us your reaction to these stories.
Thomas: On the issue of the suit, the suit is an
important piece of emergency equipment which has varying sizing adjustments
in it and it was brought up in the shuttle with me, and I worked with
the commander of the mission to test it the first time, we found that
it was not in correct adjustment, so with his agreement, and agreement
from the ground, we made some adjustments to the length of the legs
so that I could don and doff the suit properly, and we did that successfully
and the suit was fine after that. So once that was done we had no problem.
It was just a problem of some straps on the side that were no set up
to suit me properly. One of the problems you have when you come to space
is that you grow in height, your spine extends a little bit in the absence
of gravity and I think that's what was the problem with sizing this
particular suit.
I've been talking with Talgat a lot and we've been working together
in the Priroda module. We're having a good time together. We joke and
kid around. I'm sort of cuing him on English and he's cuing me on Russian
and we're telling a lot of war stories together and talking a lot about
music and things, and having a good time.
Question: How important is it to be able to communicate
socially as well as technically? Do you find that the social aspects
in space are just as important as the scientific aspects?
Thomas: Absolutely. Without a doubt, because we
spend a lot of time together in a confined space, not just working as
professionals, but around the dinner table and this environment here
and talking about things and sharing experiences of the day, and looking
out the window and observing things together, so you obviously want
to be able to have a discourse together and talk freely about things,
and we're doing that. We're getting there.
Question: Can you give us a sense of your experiments
and what you're trying to accomplish during your time on Mir.
We've activated a number of the experiments. The one that's taking
most of my time and certainly the one I find most captivating from an
interest point of view is the growth of cellular tissue in a bioreactor
vessel and this is an attempt to grow human cancer cells in an artificial
environment. The idea that you can synthesize an artificial tumor which
you could use for biomedical studies. It's going to take a long time
to do this of course, because the growth process is very slow, but so
far indications are that it's going quite well and we're quite pleased.
We have some other experiments we've been undertaking some studies in
here to document the environment within Mir because we want to ensure
that we maintain a good environment from the point of view of contaminants.
We're documenting the background radiation environment in Mir. We'll
be activating an experiment to do some plant growth studies and shortly
we'll begin studies looking at the behavior of the human body in this
rather unusual zero-gravity environment.
Question: I'm reading your bio, and it says you
enjoy horseback riding and jumping, mountain biking, running, wind surfing,
playing classical guitar, so unless there's more room up there than
I know about you must be doing something else for relaxation. Can you
tell us what you're doing?
Thomas: Those are activities I've done at various
times in the past. I have to confess that I don't do them all at the
same time. There is somewhere here, although I've yet to find it, a
guitar, and one of the things Talgat and I want to do is play some music
together, because he's actually a very good guitarist and shares a common
taste in music that I do, and so we're hoping that we will actually
be able to play guitar and I've brought some sheet music to do that.
Some of the other activities, basically I've been passing recreational
time by looking out the window and taking photographs of the planet,
which is a lot of fun, or late at night, just before bed, I do like
most people do, I pick up a book and I read, and I've just been reading
some books to help get to sleep.
Question: How is it as a place to live and work?
Thomas: So far it's proving to be a very interesting
place to live and work. Living in zero gravity is a really unusual sensation.
If you want to have fun, zero gravity is a great place to do it. But
I would have to admit that if you want to do a very careful, detailed
work, zero gravity is tough because you'd be amazed how easily you lose
things. You take something and you just let it go for a minute, and
you turn your back and you come back and it's gone somewhere, and you
won't find it again. And I've had a terrible time just losing things,
putting things down and forgetting about them, and they come loose and
go flying off somewhere, tools and personal equipment. So that's a big
adjustment you have to make, to remember to always put something down
and tether it so that you can get back to it, no matter what it is.
Your toothbrush even. Your comb. So those are big adjustments in the
lifestyle that you have to make when you're in this kind of environment.
Question: You said before the mission "This is
going to be hard." Has it turned out to be as hard as you anticipated?
Thomas: Yes. It is hard. It's hard because you're
isolated. I mean, I have a very stimulating work day every day. A lot
of challenging activities, and of course the view is always there and
it's an amazing view. But each day tends to roll into the next and there
comes a certain monotony and you have to use your own resources to make
the life interesting, to keep your motivation going. And it's undeniably
a challenge because you're in a confined space. It's crowded, and you
have some difficult objectives, so there are great challenges of taking
on a mission like this. There's no doubt about it.
Question: Six people are on Mir. What extra measures
are you and the other crew members taking to make allowance for the
extra mouths to feed and bodies to keep alive.
Thomas: The resources of Mir can support the additional
crew persons here with oxygen and we have an abundance of food. I have
to tell you, I'm eating very well up here, perhaps a little too well.
There's plenty of food, so we're very comfortable. We're very confined
in our work areas because there's not a lot of additional space. We've
got experiments set up adjacent to one another throughout Priroda, for
example, and you have to work around a colleague while you're trying
to get from one experiment to the next. But we understand that and we
do that together because we just understand that that's par for the
course right now.
Question: Anything surprising to you about physical
changes, intellectual changes, emotional changes. Your longest mission
before was 10 or 11 days, and now you've been up there a lot longer
than that. Anything surprising you about how you're changing.
Thomas: I don't notice personal changes. The biggest
surprise is that I've come to expect and adapt very quickly to the idea
that things are weightless. You get used to the idea that you can have
things like this in front of you and that's normal, that's the norm.
And if you think about it, that's really a bizarre concept. After 40
something years of living on the planet, that I've not been able to
do this, now I can do this, and yet I've adapted in really the space
of few days to accepting that to be a perfectly natural thing, which
was a very unexpected occurrence.
Question: What do you eat and how does it taste?
Thomas: We have plenty of food. We have essentially
a mixture of two meals a day of American food, two meals a day of Russian
food, and it's a variety of foods of freeze-dried variety like you might
use if you went on a camping trip, as well as prepackaged food, as well
as regular canned food. It's got a good cross section of tastes from
chicken, fish, red meat, a whole variety of vegetables and soups, and
of course snacks like cookies and crackers, peanuts and cashews, and
things like that. So it's really a very full diet. A good selection
of juices and tea and coffee. I have more than enough to eat. Probably
too much actually.
Question: What's your impression of the support
you're getting from the ground and what could the Russian controllers
or your NASA people in Russia do to make this an easier four and a half
months?
Thomas: They've been pillars of strength. The flight
surgeon is taking care of my e-mail and forwarding my e-mail to me so
I get personal communications. The people in the Mission Operations
Support area are providing me regular dialogue of what needs to be done
each day and what the expectations are of the experiments, and any problems
I have, they're all happy to step forward and help out with them. The
NASA organizations have provided me a lot of psychological support.
They've provided a nice selection of video greetings from friends and
family, which I replayed the other day and to my very great surprise
and enjoyment there was one there from Alan Alda, no less, who happened
to be at Johnson Space Center one day and they asked him to do this
and he did a wonderful piece wishing me well on Mir.
Question: Are you getting along with all you crewmates?
Thomas: Yes, very well. We're working well together,
and I think it's going very well. I think the interpersonal relationships
are sound. Of course, we all know each other, we've all spent time together
last year off and on at various stages of our training together in Star
City, so it's not like we're new to each other. We know each other quite
well and the interpersonal relationships are good I think.
Question: There was an incident this week where
the Mir went out of control for a minute or two when somebody put the
wrong program into an onboard computer, we heard. The Russians say it
was no big deal. Was it? And how often do things like this happen?
Thomas: That's the only such incident that's happened
in the time I've been here. And from my perspective, I never even noticed
it. I didn't see any sign of it. In fact, if someone hadn't told me
about it, I wouldn't even have know. It was quite benign.
Question: How would you describe living on Mir
compared to what you were led to believe it was going to be like?
Thomas: The biggest issue is that we're really
short of storage space and we're always fighting this problem of storage,
of where to put things in order to do work, and that, I see as being
the big surprise from my point of view.
Read
Andy Thomas' Oral History
Read
more about Life on Mir with John Blaha
Read
more about Andy Thomas and NASA-7
|
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| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of February 20, 1998
Dave Wolf Talks About Being Back on Earth
On February 19, 1998, David Wolf conducted his first press conference
since returning to Earth after 128 days in space.
Wolf: The mission's by far not over. We're continuing
medical research data acquisition and rehabilitation is a fairly extensive
job. It's serious business coming back from that long of a space flight
and then reacclimating to gravity. A little over two weeks have gone
by and I'm feeling much better. Particularly in the last few days, strength
is coming back. We met our mission objectives and in many cases exceeded
them in the areas of technical operations of the space station, repairs
of the space station, and the scientific research of the space station,
and part of what we are learning is how to join those three areas simultaneously
-- station ops, research, and basic living -- and do these in effective
manner. Now on the ground we are busy transferring this information
in a timely manner into the International Space Station program so that
we can take the many lessons that all seven of us have learned and feed
them in. It's not just us that have learned, of course, it's a big team
involved in this and the debriefing is important to all of us to understand
the perspective we saw from space, how that works with the perspective
the ground control team saw, the engineering and analysis team. So the
teams should be very proud to have done this mission in such an effective
manner. It was a pleasure to work with all of you from all the space
centers of course, with some reluctance and pleasure I hand the baton
over to Andy, the inflight baton and move into the groundbased phase
of transferring the information in a useful manner.
Question: Dave I know there's a lot training that
goes on to prepare for what you might experience after a long stay.
What is something that you experienced that you were not prepared for?
Wolf: The preparation was good and to me there
were not major shocks. No training can prepare you fully for the experience
of actual spaceflight, particularly long duration. All the little details
of how to move effectively, how to handle your equipment and gear in
zero gravity, this is something you get better with every day and in
fact the last day I got better. Every day, it was better than the day
before. So there were no big surprises, but hundreds of little efficiencies
to be learned.
Question: If you could have had a pet or mascot
on Mir what would it be and why?
Wolf: I think I would have brought an aquarium.
It would have been fun to have watched the fish swim upside down and
all around. I think they would do that.
Question: Could you describe one of your science
experiments for kids in terms of the hypothesis, the procedure, and
what were some of the preliminary results that you had.
Wolf: Sure, It's important that you can grow human
tissue outside the body for medical research. A hypothesis might be
that in zero gravity it would be possible to grow three- dimensional
tissue because gravity would be expected to pull the tissue down to
a flat surface. And this is important for recreating human tissue. So
we would test that hypothesis by putting the cells in space and watching
how they grow and if it didn't meet our expectation, we would have to
understand why our hypothesis is wrong. Any good hypothesis gives you
important information whether it's proved or disproved. And we would
move forward with that from an understanding of our hypothesis. And
our preliminary results do in fact support that hypothesis. We saw and
I have excellent photography of beautiful three-dimensional tissues
forming which points the way for the next step.
Question: Based on your experiences, do you believe
it's realistic that astronauts in the future will have more than one
long-duration mission in their career? Is that a realistic expectation
do you think?
Wolf: Anatoly was on his fifth six-month mission
and in fact it is more necessary. This is an era of professional astronauts
who get better and better with each mission, and this is the time in
fact to do repeat missions.
Question: I wonder if you have some thoughts on
where some weak spots may be in the preparations. You're up there for
three or four months but it takes a year or longer just to get to the
starting line. What kinds of things are you saying to the people who
are running the program in terms of making this adjustment a little
bit easier?
Wolf: There's no easy way to learn Russian up front.
That just takes hard work and time. There are some concrete recommendations
that we're making. One that is levied against our own program by astronauts
frequently, a little too much on the theory of equipment operations
and a little too little time on actually running check lists and pushing
the buttons. Up in space you're a technician pushing buttons more than
a designer involved in the theory of instrumentation and equipment.
So some weighting in that direction I think would have been useful.
Question: Dave, on a personal note what were some
of the things that you missed the most? When you got back on Earth after
spending so many months up there, what did you do?
Wolf: Interestingly enough, I picked up some coffee
on the way into work today and it was fun just driving a car into the
convenience store and going in and getting a coffee. All the little
things that you don't even notice in life become very big things and
important and enjoyable when you come back from away from Earth, and
that's something I'd like to hold on to for the rest of my life, is
enjoying all the details of life.
Question: About your readaptation, can you talk
a little about how it's gone and how if at all it may have differed
from that of your six predecessors?
Wolf: I think that my readaption fits squarely
in the middle of my predecessors, the other five that have returned.
And it's hard, it's serious business coming back from a long-duration
space flight. The first three days were very serious balance problems,
then it got into muscle fatigue and essentially just carrying my own
body weight or rolling over in bed was enough to strain muscles. My
whole body was sore from head to toe. Now that has gone away for the
most part and I am working on conventional physical rehabilitation,
very hard for a person that's very weak. And we're monitoring the bone
density how it comes back and how fast, as well as muscle strength and
coordination and I'm not back yet, and I think it's going to be a fairly
long process.
Question: And were you unusually nauseated at all,
and were there any special procedures taken for you in the first few
days after you came back that might not have been taken for the five
others?
Wolf: Not that I know of. When I moved my head
speaking in the first night I would get nauseated and had trouble eating
that night, very much, and the next day I ate the pizza and felt pretty
good about it. That went away over a few days, and to be honest I haven't
crossed that story with the other astronauts that have returned to know
if it's atypical or not.
Question: Can you remember a time during your stay
on the station when cultural or language difference led to a disagreement
or difference of opinion and how the crew overcame that?
Wolf: There's no question we had times of very
close friendship and warmth and times where we disagreed over issues.
I think that is expected when anybody is in close quarters for that
long of a time. There's not unresolved issues and nothing stands out
in my mind. Sometimes our philosophy was a little difficult to discuss
because of language limitations, but we were able to work together quite
effectively.
Question: Since you are one of the few astronauts
who have conducted a spacewalk with our Russian colleagues, what did
that experience tell you about the challenge that NASA and Russia are
facing in the future in building the International Space Station? And
in your opinion are we up to that task?
Wolf: We're clearly up to the task. I didn't even
notice it was Russian space suit and a Russian vehicle we were going
out of or that we were even speaking Russian. It was third-level concern
to me. Getting the job done was what was on my mind and was what was
on Anatoly's mind and we had no problem working together even though
we had never done a water run together on the ground preflight. We still
worked somewhat seamlessly I think in the EVA. It was very comfortable.
This was due to our predecessors and our close work together over the
last 2 1/2 years or so, and it would have been hard to imagine doing
that cold on ISS having not had the experience we have now.
Question: You've talked about wanting to keep doing
this. After a couple of weeks of recovery, do you still want stay in
the Astronaut Corps?
Wolf: Yes. I am a career man, and I plan to stay
in the Astronaut Corps and fly as long as NASA will let me, and other
long-duration flights would be fine with me as well as any other mission.
Question: Some of your predecessors talk about
sometimes when they sleep they dream of being on Mir, that they are
back on Mir. Do you have any of these sort of dreams or do you ever
forget where you are, and is it comfortable, or are you unhappy when
you realize you're back on Earth, or are you happier when it happens?
Wolf: There's a little of both there. I certainly
do have dreams that I am still up on Mir and they are fascinating dreams
and I in fact enjoy the little visit back to the space ship and I am
a little disappointed when I come back and can't lift the refrigerator
with my baby finger. Then I realize how great the Earth is also. It's
lucky to be able to experience both.
Question: Can you give us a couple other favorite
or pet examples that you can think of where your experience on Mir will
help make ISS operations better?
Wolf: Yes. How to put straps and bungies on the
wall and what height, what lengths. Particular designs to make the use
of the surface area more effective, how to make translation aids, where
to put hand holds and what type. There's literally hundreds of lessons.
How to build a trash can so the trash stays in it, more doesn't come
out with your hand as you pull your hand out than you put in. How to
store food, and package foods so that we have the right kinds of meals
at the right times available for everybody. Everything from that to
the toilet. It's just a completely different way of life in every detail
needs to be looked at and every detail that's done better translates
into more efficiencies on orbit for the scientific world and the technical
operations world. You can't separate habitability issues from the workload
and efficiencies of work issues; it's all one in the same when you are
up there.
Question: There was high drama, before you left
over the potential risks to your life, instead you ended up with what
was a fascinating series of e-mail descriptions of really work-a-day
life in space. What factors account for this sudden absence of problems
and what do you say to critics who continue to argue that these continuing
U.S. sojourns aboard Mir are unnecessarily risky and don't add anything
to your learning for the space station.
Wolf: We saw a system of checks and balances work
very well to understand the safety issues. We're in the flying business
and you can always find a reason not to fly. We flew. We made the right
decision, that's absolutely clear at this point. It will never be risk
free to fly in space, as any valuable endeavor. So we're up there working
hard and that's what my mission reflected, the three of us worked very
hard and we had good luck and systems behaved well and we took that
station a notch up in maintenance level. I had no idea the level of
construction that could be done from inside the spacecraft. An example
is the Vosdukh system, that's the carbon dioxide removal system. You
just can't believe how much of that internal spacecraft was taken apart
to install and construct this system. The level of construction that
could occur, would have been hard to imagine had I not seen that and
participated in it, so that among hundreds of other lessons, there's
just no question we got the value out of this program and continue to.
Question: I'm still struck by the comments of isolation
that the participants from the U.S. feel and I wonder if you can talk
a little bit about how much of an obstacle you think that is. Is it
an obstacle for everyone or does it depend on the individual's personality?
Is it something you encounter early and overcome, over time, or is it
something that sort of builds and there's sort of a crescendo at the
end as you look forward to coming back and wrapping up all of this?
Do you see any way to deal with that or is it just something you have
to learn to expect?
Wolf: You sure do miss Earth, and all the detail
of it. At the same time you need to get a mindset where you move to
space and you are moving to a new environment and sometime later you'll
move back to Earth. Allowing your mind to separate and be living in
space for an in-depth period helps you adapt. I think when I overcame
that a month or so into the mission, things were much easier. I did
not feel highly isolated. I felt I lived in a new place and had a new
world and it was easy. Everybody's going to react differently and use
different methods to adapt.
Question: You said you had to make the adjustments,
that you were in a new place. What did you feel most comfortable doing
in that new place and what did you feel least comfortable doing?
Wolf: I felt very comfortable doing research up
there, setting up a work station, wiring up the gear, making observations
and thinking about measurements. It felt comfortable to be in a laboratory
working. As for as being least comfortable, I wasn't uncomfortable really
with any aspect of the mission. Really felt comfortable about all of
it.
Read
David Wolf's Oral History
Read
more about David Wolf and NASA-6
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of February 27, 1998
Frank Culbertson Discusses Activities on Mir
Astronaut Frank Culbertson, NASA's Shuttle-Mir Program Manager, talks
about the progress of the final increment of the Shuttle-Mir program.
Andy Thomas is in the 34th day of his tour of duty onboard the
Mir. Read us your report card on the first month of this seventh American
mission to Mir.
Culbertson: Andy's definitely working hard and it definitely
is a challenge for him but he's an A+ student all the way. He's handling
it really well. I believe he had a good understanding of what it was
going to be like before he started, and he's confirmed much of that.
He certainly is turning to and providing a lot of good information to
us on the ground through his e-mails and the video.
We see that he seems to be getting along very well with his new
crewmates. He started this mission with Mir-24 cosmonauts Solovyev and
Vinogradov. They've come home and been hailed for the work that they
have done repairing the station. What sort of shape is the Mir in now?
Culbertson: The Mir is definitely in good shape. They
worked very hard to repair the systems and use the hardware that was
sent up to them to do that repair, and as Dave Wolf said, they are master
craftsmen at doing that. They did have an anomaly yesterday on the Mir
that got everybody's attention for a while. It looks like we're going
to have to replace a valve that got overheated. In the trace contaminant
system, they have a canister that heats up to over 200 degrees centigrade
and apparently a switch was out of configuration and allowed the fan
to come on, which blew hot air through this canister through a valve
whose seals were not designed to take that high a temperature. So they
ended up producing a little bit of smoke and smell and elevated the
carbon monoxide a little bit, but that's been coming down steadily,
with the alternative system they have. They always have a backup to
everything, and the crew's still in good shape and we believe we'll
fix that eventually once they get the spare parts onboard.
Up until a week ago Thomas was sharing laboratory space in the Priroda
module with the French researcher Leopold Eyharts. Did the presence
of another crew onboard the Mir affect the start-up of Thomas' science
program?
Culbertson: It certainly was a factor that we considered
in trying to evaluate what workload we should put on him and what pace
he should begin at. I think everybody was very patient with each other
and they worked very well together. He should be able to pick up the
pace a little bit more now and get a more of the resources specifically
targeted for his experiments, and I think that he'll see a higher workload.
But it also was good in that it allowed him to get acclimated to where
he was without having to worry too much about the science. Apparently
he and Leopold worked together very well in the Priroda.
Thomas' Russian crewmates have begun preparations for a planned
series of spacewalks to the exterior of the Spektr module, with the
first now targeted for this coming Monday evening CST. Describe the
tasks the cosmonauts have planned on this excursion, and discuss what
Thomas' job will be inside the station while Musabayev and Budarin work
outside.
Culbertson: This first EVA for the Mir-25 crew will be
around the Spektr module and around the damaged area that occurred with
the collision with the Progress. They're going to install some handrails
that are already out there that Solovyev took out on a previous EVA
so that it'll be easier to work around that area. Then they're going
to install some foot restraints at the base of the solar array that
will allow them to work up the sides of the solar array without having
to hang on to it. And then they will install a bracket or a brace on
the side of the solar array that will stiffen it in case there is any
further weakening in the structure and prevent it from flopping around
so that in the future they can not only conduct operations safely with
docking, etc., but also if they want to do further activities with that
solar array, it's stiffer and stronger.
Previously you've said you thought it unlikely that Spektr will
ever be completely recovered and put back into service, but that the
effort to find and seal the leak in the module's hull would be worthwhile.
As the U.S., Russia and their other partners look to begin assembly
of a new space station later this year, what's to be gained from trying
to repair a facility which probably has only a short time remaining
on orbit?
Culbertson: I don't know that we'll be able to get very
far in repairing it, but certainly I still think that detecting the
leak and working on leak detection techniques and hardware will be beneficial
for the future because it's not guaranteed if you have a leak you're
going to know exactly where it is, and we certainly would like to be
able to plug it. So we've still got people looking at options for indicator
gases or other means. The Russians are putting what they call some "tell
tails" or tufts around the base of the solar array on those handrails
that may give us some indication if we flow air through that module
of where the leak might be. It's very difficult to isolate, though.
Read
Frank Culbertson's Oral History
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of March 13, 1998
Neal Pellis Discusses Thomas's Research Program
Neal Pellis, Senior Scientist in Biotechnology and Cell Science at
Johnson Space Center, talks about the research program that Andy Thomas
is performing while on Mir.
Throughout his time on the Mir Andy Thomas has been working to eliminate
large air bubbles inside the COCULT reactor vessel. Why are those bubbles
a problem, and what action has been taken to shrink or remove them from
the apparatus?
Pellis: "The bubbles are a problem mainly because
they offer an additional mechanical shear or stress on the cells that
are growing inside the reactor and they can actually knock apart assemblies
that have already taken place under the unique conditions of microgravity.
That's one thing. The second thing about it is that it does interrupt
some of the flow streaming that's necessary to feed the cells. So we
have two concerns and the first one is the most critical concern, largely
related to the size of the bubbles. The bubble's are not new to us because
we had this similar experience when John Blaha was up there with a previous
experiment that was with cartilidge. These bubbles can occupy a substantial
volume of the reactor and as they pass around the tissue they can knock
the small assemblies apart. There are several strategies that you can
undertake in order to shrink or eliminate the bubbles. The first is
a mechanical approach. We changed the roptational configuration of this
reactor in such a fashion that it almost acts like a centrifuge instead
of a bioreactor so those things of greater mass will move to the outside
and the gaseous bubbles that are less will move to the inside proximal
to that inner cylinder, which is actually a filter and the attempt would
be then to increase the flow rate and force those out. The mechanical
approach has been worked with a number of different engineers and scientists
from within NASA and from outside NASA and as yet that strategy has
not given us the result that we want. So the mechanical approach, and
there are several ways in which we have tried to do this, is not giving
us the kind of result we got in increment 3 with John Blaha. The alternate
approach right now is to metabolically eliminate them and the way that
we do that is that we slow the rate at which we feed the cells and in
feeding the cells, we're feeding them oxygen at the same time. The bubbles
are made up of oxygen and nitrogen and carbon dioxide primarily. What
you can do is force the cells to eat the oxygen out of the bubble and
the bubble decreases. As it decreases its amount of oxygen, it's nitrogen
concentration goes up and by what's called 'partial pressure difference'
they will actually dissolve. They'll actually redissolve back into the
culture medium and slowly you can erode the bubble away. The extent
to which we can be successful doing this is the unknown. We know already
that we have reduced the size of them."
Earlier versions of this experiment flew on previous mission increments,
beginning with John Blaha's tour of duty; what has been learned from
the work done on orbit so far?
Pellis: "It's a scientific bonanza for us even
though it was a single experiment that was conducted over approximately
140 days. That was a cartilidge experiment with John Blaha, and obviously
the things that we have learned is that we can in fact assemble and
propagate cells to make immature cartilidge, which is much to our advantage,
because it's most biocompatible when it's immature. It was a very successful
experiment from that standpoint. It's was a very successful experiment
from the cell biology standpoint in that we learned that cells conduct
themselves very differently in microgravity in that their assembly and
array and the way they put themselves togetyher is is much different
than it is on Earth. That's a very telling incident, albeit a very narrow
window to look through right now, but it's a very telling incident when
we conceptualizing things like wound healing or repair of bone or repair
of solid tissue, repair of cartilidge. When you start thinking in the
context of embryogenesis, how would things develop embryologically?
Would cells arrange the same way they do on the ground? We don't know
this. So we got a little peek in microgravity. Terrestrial biology behaves
substantially different. So it's a very exciting time for the scientists.
"The subsequent mission that we've done that was operated by
Dave Wolf was a series of experiments in which we tried to learn whether
we can conduct a cell repository on orbit. in a laboratory we grow cells
every day and we take a small sample out and put them into new culture
media and grow them up again. That's a critically important measure
in operating a cell biology, a cell and tissue culture-type laboratory
on orbit. And we needed to know if we could do that. And in addition,
we needed to know if space invokes any untoward effects on these cell
populations as they replicate. Do we have the same kind of cell that
we started with? Is there something different, and is that difference
invoked by microgravity, the radiation environment, what? Once again,
those findings are in the accumulation stage. We just received those
samples and so I can't make distinct comments about it, but we're very
excited about what the prospects are in that."
Describe how flying this experiment on the Russian space station
has helped the technology grow, and talk about how it's planned to be
used on the international space station.
Pellis: We look forward to a continuously operating facility
on International Space Station wherein we would be able to conduct numerous
different types of experiments that lead to new approaches in tissue
engineering disease modeling. The Mir experience has given us a lot
of cues on how we will do this. For this it has been school. We're hoping
that with the culmination of Andy's work that we will graduate and instead
of using space station to learn how to do the experiments, we'll use
space station to actually conduct the experiment. We're very grateful
for the fact that we have the Mir experience to be able to do that --
both scientifically and from the standpoint of development of the instrumentation."
Read
Phase 1 Scientist John Uri's Oral History
Read
more about Shuttle-Mir Science
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week March 27, 1998
Interview with Cosmonaut Alexander Alexandrov
While on-orbit work has been going on, a number of Russian spacewalking
experts have been at the Johnson Space Center for meetings of the International
Space Station's joint spacewalk working group. The leader of the Russian
delegation is cosmonaut Alexander Alexandrov, the chief of the flying
and test service of RSC energia; Alexandrov conducted two spacewalks
from the Salyut-7 space station in 1983, and spent 160 days aboard the
Mir Space Station in 1987.
Earlier this week he was asked to describe the work planned for the
Mir-25 cosmonauts during next Wednesday's spacewalk.
"Musavayev and Budarin will exit from the airlock and then with the
help of a cargo boom that is on the Base Block, will translate to the
area on Spektr where the incapacitated solar array is located and will
prepare a workplace around the array. They will place anchors in the
workplace and they will bring with them all of the materials they need
to perform the repair. The central beam requires a splint, as it were,
as you would for a broken leg. It's about a meter and a half long. It
has clamps on the ends for attachment to the beam, and once they attach
this to the beam, and I'm sure they'll be able to do this, to then reinforce
the array beam so that it becomes rigid. That's the repair itself. We
did not want to remove the array because although it's damaged it does
provide electrical power and it would be a shame to throw it away, so
we decided to repair it.
First, as I've mentioned, we have to reinforce the array. Next we will
do the necessary EVAs required by the flight program and then only after
that we can undertake new work related to repair of Spektr. In any case,
we wish to perform examinations of the Spektr in the area of the radiators
and the array drive and to find any leaks in that area and then possibly
it would be possible to create plasters, as it were, to seal the leaks,
and if this is not a crack or anything like that we could use special
materials - mastics and adhesives - that would seal the leaks, but this
is in the future. At present we are working out various methodologies
to perform such a repair because you want to assure hardening in vacuum,
you want to understand very swell that any possible leakage has been
eliminated from the Spektr module, and our specialists are engaged in
examining these issues. We have a need to change the jets on the boom
that allow us to take care of roll maneuvers of the station. This number
1 unit, which is on the station now, has exhausted its propellant and
it must be replaced, and that will require three or four EVAs."
Read
Alexander Alexandrov's Oral History
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of April 3, 1998
Interview with Cosmonaut Alexander Alexandrov
While on-orbit work has been going on, a number of Russian spacewalking
experts have been at the Johnson Space Center for meetings of the International
Space Station's joint spacewalk working group. The leader of the Russian
delegation is cosmonaut Alexander Alexandrov, the chief of the flying
and test service of RSC energia; Alexandrov conducted two spacewalks
from the Salyut-7 space station in 1983, and spent 160 days aboard the
Mir Space Station in 1987.
Earlier this week he was asked to describe the continuing work planned
for the Mir-25 cosmonauts as they attempt to replace the Sofura boom's
jet thruster package.
"The work consists of the following: The cosmonauts egress from the
lock and translate with the help of the boom. One of them will be on
the base, the other will be at the end of the boom, and the one at the
base will translate the boom to the Sofora. The crew will disconnect
the cable connections of the Sofora, go to the top, unlatch the Sofora
jets, and then with a uniform force free it from the boom and move it
from the boom and allow it to drift away. That's one EVA. After that
they return inside the station.
There are three small auxiliary booms, which, so that they not interfere
with the operation of the Sofora, will also be removed and placed nearby,
near the base of the Sofora.
When the crew egresses the third time they will allow the Sofora to
hinge back and will connect the end of the Sofora with the reciprocal
portion of the jet assembly in the Progress cargo vehicle. Then, with
the help of drives - which are rather powerful and there is a manual
backup in case they fail - the crew will redeploy the Sofora into its
fully extended position, will reconnect all the necessary connections,
and the new jet assembly will be ready to work.
If there is a fourth EVA, then the crew will reconstruct the configuration
of booms that were there before back onto the Kvant and then they will
return inside the station. That summarizes the program."
Read
Alexander Alexandrov's Oral History
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of April 10, 1998
Interview with Jerry Miller
This week Musabayev and Budarin conducted their second spacewalk to
the area of the Spektr module; describe the work they were able to complete
there this past Monday.
Miller: As a matter of fact, it was the completion of an EVA which
was started earlier. In order to work on the broken solar array they
had to first install a set of handrails to create a work site. The Spektr
module was not originally designed to have EVAs performed on it, and
so around the base of the solar array, a work site had to be created.
Once the handrails were installed, they placed two foot restraints on
either side of the array, and then went up to the structure that had
the problem from the earlier Progress collision and installed a brace,
which is a bracket - two ends with an adjustment pole in between to
stabilize it.
That solar array was weakened last summer when it took the brunt of
the impact of the Progress re-supply ship, but it has maintained its
position for more than nine months now; why did Russian mission managers
feel it necessary to install a brace to it now?
Miller: Interestingly enough, we saw in the original pictures, just
after the accident where the two support struts which maintain the position
of the array normally, had a fracture on one of them. In subsequent
pictures we've seen a little bit of what's called, in engineering terms,
"creep." If you have damage to a piece of metal and it continues to
fatigue over time, that crack will propagate or creep, and there's some
concern that continued motion of the station could cause that to completely
fracture, at which point the array would be held just by electrical
cables.
Tomorrow morning the Mir-25 cosmonauts are to begin a series of spacewalks
to another part of the station, to replace a jet thruster package on
the Sofora boom, which rises from the Kvant-1 module. That task is slated
to be completed over the course of at least three spacewalks...what
is it about the task that makes it so time-consuming?
Miller: Exactly. Any time you're going to introduce additional forces,
such as the thrusters off of Priroda, you're concerned that you're going
to have a little bit more motion out of that array and with the brace
in place, it'll stabilize it and we know where it's restrained rather
than just be the flexible electrical cabling.
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of April 10, 1998
A Conversation with Andy Thomas
You look like you're having a fine time!
Thomas: Oh yeah. We are. This is a grand way to spend time.
It's an amazing environment to be in that you can do this kind of thing
at will ["stands" on his head]. Try that at home.
Do you enjoy standing on your head, Andy?
Thomas: I'm not standing on my head, though. This is zero gravity.
There's no up or down. I enjoy the freedom that we have in this environment.
It's really amazing to just function and just enjoy the freedom of movement
that it gives you. It presents difficulties with working and so on,
but just to savor it is really something I relish.
Actually, it would be at times hard work having to tether everything
that you initially take hold of.
Thomas: Yes. That's true. When you're doing work with tools
and instruments it can be very difficult because everything floats away.
So the simple act, for example, of undoing a screw, can be quite complicated,
because as soon as the screw comes free it will float away, the screwdriver
in your hand will float away. So everything has to be tethered down,
and it can be difficult to work under those circumstances. You need
extra pairs of hands always to grab these things that are floating around.
You get accustomed to it after a while, though. There's a learning curve
you go through and then you become quite adept at it.
Andy, you're half way through your scheduled stay. How is it going?
Thomas: I think it's going very well. It's a little more than
half way through. Yesterday was the 11-week anniversary of my launch
on STS-89 in January. I have about seven weeks, a little more maybe,
to go before STS-91 will arrive and pick me up. I'm very pleased with
the progress. I've settled into what I think is a very stable routine
and I think things are going well.
It has lived up to expectations?
Thomas: Oh yes. I think the expectations I had were largely
accurate. I'm pleased with the way a number of things have gone. I'm
pleased with the way I adapted to the zero-gravity environment because
that's not always easy to do for some people. I'm pleased with the experimental
program that I have and the work that I'm doing, and I'm pleased, particularly,
with the crew that I'm working with and the rapport that we're developing.
Andy, I have to say that in the beginning there were reports of
some hiccups. How accurate were they regarding your space suit and your
Russian language?
Thomas: The problem with the suit was that when I tried it on
up here, it wasn't adjusted correctly for my size because when you get
into zero gravity, your spine actually grows a little bit and you become
a little bit taller, so clothing has to have an adequate amount of adjustment.
Of course it's a bit hard to predict how much adjustment that's going
to be. So I tried to put this suit on, which you have to pull over your
head, and I wasn't able to do it. And with the concurrence of the Russian
commander we agreed that the best thing to do was to readjust the suit,
and in concurrence with specialists on the ground in Russia, we made
those adjustments and then the suit fit fine. So I was pleased about
that. The Russian language, of course, is a big challenge for anyone
who undertakes a mission like this because you need to have a reasonably
good social vocabulary and, of course, a strong technical vocabulary
as well, and that's not an easy thing to do. I think a measure of the
communication skills you have is what kind of relationship you're able
to establish with the people you fly with, your crew mates, and as I
said a moment ago, I'm particularly pleased with the way we've built
a relationship, a working relationship and a social relationship.
I thought you were brave in the first place to attempt to speak
Russian.
Thomas: So did I. It was a big challenge, but that's part of
the reason I did it. It was a very appealing challenge. I was quite
enamored with the idea of learning this language, which, from our perspective
in the West, is such a "foreign" foreign language if you follow my meaning.
And it has been a fascinating experience.
Mir has come under a level of controversy. Is the ship sailing well,
if I can put it that way?
Thomas: Yes, I think so. The systems onboard have been functioning
very well. We've had minimal problems as a matter of fact. The conditions
onboard are very stable, very comfortable. I've certainly had no complaints
about it. I think we've got a very stable vehicle and it's running well
up here.
No space walk yet. Would you like to?
Thomas: I've been through the training program in Russia to
undertake a space walk, and I'm familiar with the suits, but there is
not actually a space walk or an EVA manifested for me during this increment,
because there's not a piece of U.S. equipment that really requires a
U.S. crew person's presence. The space walks all require the cosmonauts
because they're very labor intensive on the apparatus of the station
and they've been trained for many hours in those activities. Should
one ever present itself as, perhaps, one day it might, though I don't
think during this flight, I'd like to step up to it, yes.
I know you have two colleagues with you, but there is still a level
of isolation. How are you dealing with that?
Thomas: There is isolation, and there's confinement too. It's
not claustrophobic by any means. We have a lot or room here and I feel
very comfortable here, but there is a certain amount of confinement
because you can't just get up and drive somewhere and visit someone
or go outside. What you have to do is use methods to provide yourself
some detachment from what's around you so that you can psychologically
remove yourself from the environment you're in without physically doing
it, and the way you do that is with music, books. I read a lot . There's
a guitar up here that I've tried to play. I've got CDs. I've got CD
ROMs for the computer. I've been writing. I've even tried doing some
sketches. So there's a lot of things you can do to provide recreation.
Of course, there's always looking out the window too, because we have
a pretty spectacular view.
That view out the window must be quite something. What are you seeing?
Thomas: It depends where you look. From my position here I have
windows to either side, and apparently for our orientation at this particularly
moment we're looking toward deep space with those two windows. There
are two windows down in the floor in front of me and I can see light
from them, so that suggests that the Earth must be down there. I haven't
checked our orientation at this particular moment. But you have a great
view. Right now we're passing over the Eurasian continent, probably
south of Moscow and approaching the terminator where it'll soon become
night, and then we'll head on south down toward Australia. We should
be flying over Australia in about 30 minutes. I've had some spectacular
passes over Australia, actually. It's gorgeous to see from space. It
really a multitextured land.
What do you actually see? Is it color or is it texture?
Thomas: It's both. You see texture, you see color. The mountains
you can see as folds in the land and you can see things like mountain
ranges as a collection of mountain ranges. For example, when I fly over
South Australia I can see the Mount Lofty ranges as distinct from the
Flinders range. The Flinders range stand out very much as their own
set of ranges. You can see the way they're all folded together, a bit
like a rumpled carpet, and they're all connected. And of course you
can see color too. You can see agricultural regions from space very
clearly. The areas that are farmed stand out as opposed to the natural
areas with different shades of green. Of course, it depends on the season.
In the northern hemisphere you see, at this time of year, a lot of ice
and a lot of snow. It's very white over Canada and Siberia. Perhaps
one of the most spectacular views I've had was actually one night when
we were flying south of Australia across the Great Australian Barrier.
I could see Australia city lights on one side, and then as I looked
at the other side, which was due south, I could see the Aurora Australis
over the southern polar regions, and it was this shimmering curtain
of iridescent green waving across the sky and it was really a dynamic
thing, moving and shimmering,. It was just a beautiful sight. Unfortunately
I don't have any film that's sensitive enough to capture, but it was
quite impressive.
You look absolutely wonderful. You're obviously in good health?
Thomas: Yes. Actually, the lifestyle up here is very good for
you. We have extremely good food. The Russian food is excellent. The
soups are outstanding and the juices are just marvelous and there's
plenty of it, and I also have an abundance of American food at my disposal.
We exercise regularly. I'm on a treadmill running 2.5 - 3 K on a treadmill
every day, something that I'm not perhaps as disciplined on Earth as
I should be. So, yes, it's going well. I feel good. That's one of the
amazing things about this environment. You can feel very good in this
environment, which, if you think about it, is a very alien environment
to us.
You're telling me space suits you.
Thomas: I find it a very agreeable place to be. This is an amazing
experience to go through. To be able to live and function in weightlessness
and have to do everything in weightlessness - eat, drink, sleep, and
work -- for this period of time is an extraordinary undertaking. It
really is quite amazing.
Some of the experiments that you're conducting do involve how the
body reacts to long-term weightlessness. Have you noticed anything about
your body?
Thomas: I've lost some weight, which was probably not a bad
thing. I've had a few aches and pains, which I think are a consequence
of the fact that there's a certain amount of spinal extension. Other
than that, no I haven't. I don't have any vestibular problems, I haven't
had any gastrointestinal problems. I feel very normal and feel very
healthy and comfortable, so I have no complaints about it at all.
You only have two months to go. Will you be disappointed if you
don't take a space walk, or it doesn't matter?
Thomas: No, I wont' be disappointed. I'm having a very good
experience up here. There was never a space walk planned or manifested
for me. I don't have expectation of it. I'm happy to support my crew
mates when they do the space walks as they've been doing over the last
few days and will be doing in the coming weeks. This flight is turning
out to be a really good experience from my perspective, and I'm very
pleased with the outcome of it, because as you observed, there were
lots of questions about the flight program before I left, and I'm very
pleased with this outcome.
It does occur to me that there is very little privacy. Am I correct
in understanding that you are monitored almost 24 hours of the day.
Thomas: No, not 24 hours of the day. When I do exercise I wear
a heart monitor and we transmit the data to Earth so that cardio performance
can be monitored. We periodically do tests that monitor physical parameters
during physical exertion, just to ensure that our health is maintained.
That's clearly important. But other than that, no, we're not monitored.
We work on a very normal work cycle based, of course, on Moscow time.
Get up at about 8:30 in the morning, which is a quite comfortable hour,
have some breakfast, start work. We usually work through the day. Around
1:00 or 2:00 I will stop and do my exercise and then clean up. Following
that we will have lunch, perhaps at 3:00 or 4:00, a late lunch, and
then we'll continue working usually to 7:00 or 8:00 in the evening,
follow that with dinner, perhaps then watch a video, watch a movie,
read a book, write a diary, write letters home, read e-mail, that kind
of thing, and go to bed at about 11:00 or 12:00. It's a very interesting
way to spend a day. Each day is good. If you look at each day and what
I do, I have a lot of really interesting things happen. My only thing
I would say about it is that every day tends to be like every other
day so there is an element of monotony to it a little bit. That's the
only problem with this kind of life.
We're almost out of time. Do you want me to send you up anything?
Vegemite? Anything that you're missimg out on?
Thomas: I've already put in my request for a number of items
that I'd like and some of them they're a bit reluctant to send up a
spacecraft, but they'll be waiting for me when I get back on the ground.
But thank you nonetheless.
Enjoy your stay. We look forward to seeing you again.
Thank you very much. I've enjoyed the conversation.
Read
Andy Thomas' Oral History
Read
more about Andy Thomas and NASA-7
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of May 1, 1998
Interview with Andy Thomas
Andy Thomas was interviewed on April 30, 1998, by Dan Billow
in Orlando and Ed Green in Denver.
Question: Andy, this is Dan Billow at WESH in Orlando.
Do you hear me all right?
Thomas: I hear you well, Dan. Welcome to Mir.
Question: Thank you and good morning. At least, it's
morning in Florida where I am, and I appreciate you taking some time
to talk to me. I'd like to start by asking you about the delay in your
return flight, which I'm sure you were informed of a day or two ago.
Discovery coming up about five days later. What was your first thought
when you heard about that?
Thomas: I wasn't too surprised. I've done a lot of support
work at the Cape. I know they're under a very demanding schedule with
the processing flow, so it didn't surprise me too much, and it's only
five days. You know, on Saturday I'm coming up on my 100th-day anniversary
here in space, so after having spent that much time, I'm not going to
sweat five days.
Question: I was wondering, too, what you're looking forward
to when you get home. Clearly, anyone would look forward to seeing their
family and the people that they haven't seen for a while, but what else
would you like to do when you get home? Go for a walk? And are you beginning
to think of doing that type of thing?
Thomas: Yes I am. I must admit I've started to think
more and more in that coming-home mode. I think the thing I would like
most is to have a nonscheduled life. With the precious time available
as a resource up here, it's very important that we schedule our activities
and we fill the time productively. So most of my life up here is scheduled,
and, of course, I preceded this flight with a year of training in Russia,
which was also scheduled time. Every day was scheduled, every waking
moment. So I'm very much looking forward to having no schedules in my
life and just being able to be free to do what I want - to take a walk
or go to the store or go to visit friends. I think that's going to be
the best part about being back.
Question: Easy to understand. I want to ask you, speaking
of talking with friends and family, about your e-mail, because I believe
there's been a little bit of difficulty there. Would you mind describing
in detail any delays that you've had in receiving your e-mail and the
reasons for any delays?
Thomas: The e-mail system we use is not what you would
conventionally call an e-mail system where you can just send a message
to another computer. People do it by sending messages to my flight surgeon
who is in Moscow who then formats them and puts them into the Russian
communication system for uplink here. We've had a number of problems
in the uplink space, both here onboard with the system that receives
and transmits unable to do that, but also with the system on the ground
that transmits them and receives them. So because of the loss of that
link I was unable to receive e-mails. I have been sending some out through
an alternative communication link and that has worked out better, but
certainly for a while I hadn't been receiving anything, but I believe
that there's a large number that have come up for me today, as a matter
of fact, so I'm looking forward to catching up on the e-mail.
Question: How long has it been since you've read messages
from home?
Thomas: Personal mail, it's only been about 9 or 10 days.
Question: Any problem with prioritization of those messages?
In other words, have you not received them because they've been given
lower priority than other work or other things by Russian mission control?
Thomas: I think some of the work files were sent up,
quite naturally, were given higher priority, and that would be the appropriate
thing to do, but I think the problem was basically that we didn't have
the communication links open to let any transmissions come up. We weren't
even able to receive work files that scheduled our daily activities.
That was the basic problem.
Question: How important are those messages to you, and
how much do you miss not being able to see them all the time?
Thomas: Actually, I find e-mail to be something I've
missed a lot. I really enjoy it. It's great to get messages because
you can read them and reread them and then you can respond. I really
enjoy receiving e-mail. It's a great support structure. It's a great
boost to receive them. I get a kick out of all the e-mail that I get.
Question: Andy, there's a report from the BBC that says
last June, when a Progress ship collided with Mir, the batteries on
the Soyuz craft were dead at that time and its control panel could not
be turned on. Were you ever made aware of that?
Thomas: I have not heard that story. I wasn't following
the events at that time very closely, so I don't know what the full
details were. But that's because I was not watching them that closely.
Question: Do you believe that anything like that could
ever have been the case during your stay? Are batteries always fine
on the Soyuz, or might they be out at times?
Thomas: The Soyuz is parked, docked, to us in what's
called a conservation mode, whereby it's potentially powered down to
the minimum power levels, but is available in the event that we need
to do an emergency egress and can be quickly powered up. We have flown
in the Soyuz, and the time we flew in it, it functioned perfectly and
I have every reason to believe that it would do the same thing if it
were required to. I don't have lack of confidence in that system.
Question: With regard to safety measures, I'm sure you
have a very great awareness of the things you might need to do in an
emergency. For example, would you mind telling me where the closest
fire extinguisher and breathing apparatus are to your present position
right now?
Thomas: There's some behind me. There's an access port
that you can probably see that leads to an adjacent module, Kvant-1,
and I don't think it's in the field of view but there is actually a
fire extinguisher just down there, and there's also a breathing mask
above the hatch. There's also duplicate systems at the other end of
this module, which is about 15 feet from me, which I can see, but obviously
you can't. And in each of the modules that's mated with Mir, we have
similar systems at both ends of the modules. At both ends of the modules
there's fire extinguishers and breathing masks. Should I need one, depending
on where I am in the module, I could get one from either end of the
module virtually immediately.
Question: My last question. It's my understanding that
on May 17 you'll get a Progress capsule docking and that capsule will
help lower the orbit, the altitude, that Mir is in. In other words,
you'll be on hand at sort of the beginning of the end of Mir, and while
it won't really affect your mission, how do you feel about being there
for that rather historic moment?
Thomas: Well, I don't think I would call it the beginning
of the end of Mir. The orbit is periodically lowered for a variety of
reasons to match performance boundaries of vehicles that come to it.
When the shuttle comes, the orbit is lowered, so it's a fairly standard
thing to do. It's not a big deal. I'm very conscious of the fact - and
my crewmates are too -- that we're the last international crew of this
cooperative program that is going to fly on Mir since I'll be the last
representative of the U.S. that's flying on Mir, and I'm very sensitive
about that role, and I'm very complimented that I've been able to represent
the U.S. program up here.
Question: Hello, Andrew Thomas. This is Ed Green in Denver.
Thomas: Hi Ed. You're going to have to speak up a bit.
I'm having a little trouble hearing you.
Question: All right. I've been looking forward to this
for a long time because through the miracle of technology, I sit in
Denver as you sit on the Mir. So thank you very much for being with
us this morning. You are serving as (?????) Engineer II on the Russian
Space Station Mir. Can you tell us exactly what you do on Mir, what
you're responsible for?
Thomas: I have mixed roles up here. One of my functions
is the science program that we brought aboard with us on the shuttle
back in February. It's a suite of experiments exploring various facets
of the space environment. The effect of space on the human body, on
crew persons, the effect of zero gravity on physical systems, as well
as some biological experiments. So my workday is largely focused around
those. But in addition to those, I have duties onboard the station,
particularly with regard to maintenance of water. We use water here
not just for drinking, but we use it for generating oxygen and have
assignment to water transfers that can be used to maintain those systems.
Of course, on this space station, as would be the case in any space
station, there's a lot of housekeeping duties that we're all involved
in. Maintaining the environment, keeping it clean and habitable, basically.
Question: For the longest time we seemed to hear of nothing
but problem after problem on the Mir. How are things running up there
now?
Thomas: I think that may have been true a year ago, but
I don't think, if you look at the history of the last year, that that
is the case. I think Mir has actually been running very stable operations
for quite some time now. The Russian crews have done a commendable job
in pooling the resources and bringing systems on line and restoring
the capabilities of Mir. My own colleagues up here have done no less
than 30 hours of EVA in order to brace up the damaged solar array and
then to change out an engine that had reached the end of its useful
lifetime, an attitude control engine. So I think a lot of work has been
done that's made Mir operations very stable right now and I think it
is indeed a very stable operation, and as I can testify after nearly
100 days in orbit of stable orbit operations during that period.
Question: That's certainly good to hear, and as you mentioned,
you're approaching your 100th day on orbit in Mir. You're scheduled
to depart and come back to Earth in early June, but you're also the
final of seven astronauts to join the Mir. Is it simply the end of the
program, or why the final astronaut?
Thomas: It's the end of the Phase 1 program, which is
a collaborative program between the U.S. and Russia as a precedent to
the International Space Station, to give us experience in working together
and to give the U.S. experience in long-duration space flight capability
and operating a space station. It was intended to lead into the International
Space Station, which is the next step, and so it's logical that this
program should wind down as International Space Station starts to come
on line. And that's what's happening and that's why I'm the last U.S.
representative of this program. I feel very privileged that I'm one
of those seven that has had the opportunity to fly on this vehicle.
Question: Over the course of your time on the space station,
has anything really surprised you, caught you off guard? Something you
just didn't expect?
Thomas: I've been asked that question a number of times,
and I guess I still give the same answer. It surprises me how natural
I feel in this zero-gravity environment, being able to float around
anywhere you want, at will. It now feels like something I've been doing
all my life, and clearly it's not. It's a very unnatural environment
to be in and yet I feel very comfortable in it. That has surprised me.
You have to work hard to be in it. It's not always easy, because things
are always floating around and you're losing things and they're flying
away, but I now feel very comfortable in it. I think one of the interesting
things when I get back to Earth is going to be how I adapt back to that
environment, which I'm really accustomed to, having been away from it
for so long.
Question: Being on the Mir for such an extended period
of time, what do you miss the most? What are you looking forward to
most when you return to Earth, other than, I'm sure, seeing family and
friends?
Thomas: I think just having free time. We have to make
very productive use of our time up here, of course, because it's very
expensive time. Time is a very valuable resource in zero gravity in
orbit. So every day of our week is planned out in fairly minute detail.
I always have something that I need to be doing. I think I'm looking
forward to the point where I won't have anything to do. I won't have
a lot of responsibilities, and I won't have a list of tasks for each
day. I'll just be able to get up and be free to do whatever I want to
do. Go out visit friends and do different things, whatever strikes my
will. I'm looking forward to being in that mode more than anything,
I think.
Question: Any smells that you missed or foods that you
really want to taste again?
Thomas: We have really good food up here, and I've really
enjoyed the food that we've got. I haven't become aware of missing any
specific food. I know some of my predecessors said they really miss
pizza. Pizza would be nice, but I'm not aware that I'm missing anything
particular. I think perhaps really cold drink. We don't refrigerate
drinks, so a really cold drink on a hot day would be nice. I don't find
myself missing foods in particular, specific categories of food at all.
Read
Andy Thomas' Oral History
Read
more about Andy Thomas and NASA-7
|
![](/file/15222/NASA Shuttle-Mir.iso/pc/CD-ELEMENTS/PURPLE-LINE-BLUR-RT.JPG)
| Uri, 2/6/98 | Thomas,
2/13/98 | Wolf, 2/19/98 | Culbertson,
2/27/98 | Pellis, 3/13/98 |
| Alexandrov, 3/27/98 | Alexandrov,
4/3/98 | Miller, 4/10/98 | Thomas,
4/10/98 |
| Thomas, 4/30/98 | Culbertson,
5/22/98 |
Mir-25 - Week of May 22, 1998
Frank Culbertson Reports on Mir
With the Shuttle-Mir program heading into its final days, astronaut
Frank Culbertson, the manager of NASA's phase 1 program office, discussed
the latest events on Andy Thomas' flight.
Question: Thomas is now just three weeks away from
completing the final tour of duty by an American on the Russian space
station. How would you grade the work he and his Russian crewmates have
done on orbit over the past four months?
Culbertson: This is definitely a grade A crew.
They've worked very hard, they've executed a lot of EVAs. Andy's worked
very hard on his science. They've overcome some problems, some challenges,
just like every crew, and they've maintained their health and they're
ready to continue. Andy is ready to come home and I think will be healthy
when he returns, so they're hitting their priorities and I think worked
well together as a team.
Question: Since February of last year you've provided
updates any number of times on the condition of the Mir Space Station,
which continues to fly - well beyond its original design life - in spite
of some well-publicized difficulties. What's the condition of the Russian
space station as it orbits today?
Culbertson Actually, the Mir is in very good condition.
There are still some age effects that they have accounted for and are
working on very hard, but the systems themselves are operating. We have
the redundancy that we require. We could, by our standards, transfer
another crew member to the Mir and continue operating if that were the
case and if we were planning to do that, but it certainly meets our
criteria for that. The Mir, overall, is in good shape and they've replaced
some critical systems like the RCS boom jets recently, so they're operating
just fine.
Question: Did you ever believe, given last year's
problems on the Mir, that the Shuttle-Mir program would reach its scheduled
conclusion with the Mir continuing to fly and still providing a good
platform for science?
Culbertson: Oh yes. I expected it to still be flying
and still be operating very well. You would like to not be operating
on a platform that's on it's last legs, so to speak, and we don't want
to even operate the Mir to that point, so we'd like to see the mission
conclude while it's still going strong.
Question: With the Shuttle-Mir program winding
up, the work of this cooperative effort is being directed into the next
phase of the International Space Station program-its on-orbit assembly.
Having been involved in this effort for the past four years or more,
what do you think is the most valuable lesson phase 1 teaches those
who will assemble the next space station?
Culbertson: I think the most valuable lesson is
that you're going to have things happen that are going to require problem
solving continuously. The best laid plans, the best designed systems,
you're still going to have difficulties. Long-duration space flight
is hard, and the most valuable lesson we learned from that is to expect
it to be difficult, plan for that, train for that, and then be prepared
to handle the unexpected.
Question: NASA has announced June 2 as the launch
date for Discovery on the final shuttle mission to dock with the Mir.
After all that's happened in this program, what do you think you'll
be feeling as you watch the hatches close between the two vessels next
month, and as the shuttle separates from the Russian space station for
the last time?
Culbertson: I'll probably have very mixed feelings.
I'm very proud of what everyone has done throughout this program. Folks
have put tremendous sacrifices in and time and travel and dedication
to the program. We've accomplished a lot. I'll feel a great sense of
pride about that, I think. There's a certain sense of retrospect that
I think will come from ending a program like that, but I really can't
tell you until the event occurs exactly what I'll be feeling, so I'll
tell you after that maybe.
Read
Frank Culbertson's Oral History
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