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Total EVAs: | 9 | ||
Total EVA time: | 59h 28m |
No. | Date | Together with | Time | Main tasks and notes |
1 | 30.05.2007 | O. Kotov | 5h 25m |
Installing orbital debris protection panels on
the Zvezda Service Module and replacing experiments on the hull of
Zvezda |
2 | 06.06.2007 | O. Kotov | 5h 38m |
Installing a section of Ethernet cable on the
Zarya module, installing additional Service Module Debris Protection (SMDP) panels on Zvezda, and deploying a Russian
scientific experiment |
3 | 23.07.2007 | C. Anderson | 7h 41m |
Replacing a failed power controller on the
station's truss, jettison a refrigerator-sized ammonia reservoir tank and clean
seals on a docking port on the Unity module |
4 | 27.07.2010 | M. Korniyenko | 6h 42m |
Preparing the recently delivered Russian Rassvet
Module for future automated dockings by Russian spacecraft |
5 | 15.11.2010 | O. Skripochka | 6h 27m |
Installing a multipurpose workstation on the
starboard side of the Zvezda service modules large-diameter section,
cleaning thermal insulation around the vents for the Elektron oxygen-generation
system and relocating a television camera from one end of the Rassvet docking
compartment to the other. |
6 | 24.06.2013 | A. Misurkin | 6h 34m |
They replaced a fluid flow regulator on the
Russian segments Zarya module. They also removed the Photon-Gamma unit of
the Molina-Gamma experiment from a portable workstation on Zvezda. |
7 | 16.08.2013 | A. Misurkin | 7h 29m |
They continued routing power and ethernet cables
for the future arrival of the Russian Multipurpose Laboratory Module. They also
installed on the Poisk module a panel of experiments. |
8 | 22.08.2013 | A. Misurkin | 5h 58m |
The cosmonauts removed a space laser
communications system from the hull of the Zvezda service module. |
9 | 17.08.2017 | S. Ryazansky | 7h 34m |
They deployed several nanosatellites, collected
research samples and performed structural maintenance. |
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. |