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| Total EVAs: | 8 | ||
| Total EVA time: | 42h 33m |
| No. | Date | Together with | Time | Main tasks and notes |
| 1 | 15.03.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 5h 52m |
Mounting the second Strela cran on
Mir |
| 2 | 20.05.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 5h 20m |
New setting of a solar cell from DM to
Kvant1 |
| 3 | 24.05.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 5h 43m |
Installation solar cell on Kvant1
module |
| 4 | 30.05.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 4h 20m |
Mounting tools on Priroda module |
| 5 | 06.06.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 3h 34m |
Mounting and exchanging tools on Spektr
module |
| 6 | 13.06.1996 | Y. Usachyov | 5h 42m |
Mounting power bus structure on Kvant1
module |
| 7 | 14.01.2002 | C. Walz | 6h 03m |
Moving a Strela cargo crane and install an
amateur radio antenna |
| 8 | 25.01.2002 | D. Bursch | 5h 59m |
Installing six thruster deflectors at the rear
of the Zvezda Service Module, retrieving and replacing a device to measure
material from the thrusters and installing a ham radio antenna and its
cabling |
|
Russia and the U.S. define
EVA
differently. Russian cosmonauts are said to perform
EVA
any time they are in vacuum in a space suit. A U.S. astronaut must have at
least his head outside his spacecraft before he is said to perform an
EVA. |