Spacewalk suspended after possible leak in US astronaut's helmet

Updated
Tim Peake: The First British Spacewalk in Numbers
Tim Peake: The First British Spacewalk in Numbers


NASA cut short a spacewalk on Friday at the International Space Station after one of the astronauts reported a possible leak in his spacesuit helmet, the U.S. space agency said.

Tim Peake, who on the mission became the first astronaut from Britain to walk in space, and U.S. astronaut Tim Kopra, had finished the primary goal of their outing when Kopra reported a water bubble had formed in his helmet.

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"The crew is not in any danger whatsoever," mission commentator Rob Navias said in a live broadcast of the spacewalk on NASA TV.

Ending the spacewalk two hours early was a precaution, Navias added.

See photos from the spacewalk



NASA tightened its flight rules after a spacesuit worn by Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano leaked during a spacewalk in July 2013, nearly causing him to drown.

%shareLinks-quote="The crew is not in any danger whatsoever" type="quote" author=" Rob Navias" authordesc="mission commentator" isquoteoftheday="false"%

Kopra, who was making his third spacewalk, and Peake had replaced a failed voltage regulator in the station's power system shortly after leaving the station's airlock at around 8 a.m. EST/1300 GMT.

They were scheduled to spend more than six hours outside the station, a $100 billion research laboratory that flies about 250 miles (400 km) above Earth, on other maintenance chores.

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That work will be rescheduled, Navias said.

Peake, 43, a former army major, blasted off to the ISS as part of a six-month mission for the European Space Agency in December, becoming the first Briton in space since Helen Sharman travelled on a Soviet spacecraft for eight days in 1991, and the first to do so under a British flag.

His mission has attracted widespread attention in Britain, with the spacewalk beamed live on news channels.

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