NASA astronauts complete second successful spacewalk in two weeks

Astronauts Reid Wiseman, 38, and Butch Wilmore, 51, replaced a failed electrical unit at the International Space Station Spacewalkers encountered balky bolts but still managed to complete the job in the allotted time They traveled 260 miles from earth to reach ISS

By Associated Press

Published: 14:01 EST, 15 October 2014 | Updated: 19:51 EST, 15 October 2014

NASA's spacewalking astronauts replaced a failed electrical unit at the International Space Station on Wednesday, restoring full power to the orbiting lab.

The space station had been operating since spring with only seven of its eight solar-power channels.

The work by Reid Wiseman. 38, and Butch Wilmore, 51, NASA's second spacewalk in two weeks brought the energy capability back up to 100 percent.

NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman (right) and Barry Wilmore (left) seen working inside the International Space Station previously on October 1, 2014

The spacewalkers encountered balky bolts but still managed to complete the job in the allotted time, with less than two minutes to spare.

'Yoo-hoo!' they cheered as NASA declared victory.

The voltage regulator shorted out in May but could not be replaced until now because of a yearlong hiatus in non-emergency spacewalks by NASA.

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NASA astronauts complete second successful spacewalk in two weeks

Enviroment Watch: World 3D Global warming experimental model from 1880 to 2014 using data from NASA. – Video


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NASA image of the sun looks like jack-o-lantern face

This NASA image of the sun captured Oct. 8, 2014, looks like a jack-o-lantern face. (NASA/GSPC/SDO)

The sun as imaged by the Solar Dynamics Observatory on Oct. 8, 2014, in extremeultraviolet light. (NASA/SDO)

Photo By NASA

Photo By Boyd, John/Source: "Earth as Art," published by NASA

Garden City, Kansas Center-pivot irrigation systems created the circular patterns near Garden City. The red circles indicate irrigated crops of healthy vegetation, and the light-colored circles denote harvested crops.

Photo By Boyd, John/Source: "Earth as Art," published by NASA

Carnegie Lake, Australia Ephemeral Carnegie Lake, in Western Australia, fills with water only during periods of significant rainfall. In dry years, it is reduced to a muddy marsh.

Photo By Boyd, John/Source: "Earth as Art," published by NASA

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NASA image of the sun looks like jack-o-lantern face

NASA's MAVEN: First results from mission to Mars dazzle scientists

NASA's newest Mars orbiter, MAVEN, has returned its first observations of the red planet's upper atmosphere, laying a promising foundation for answering a nagging question about the planet's environment: What happened to an atmosphere that supported a warm and wet planet some 4 billion years ago, only to become the dry, chilled desert that astronomers see today?

Although its science mission has yet to begin, the craft already has revealed clues with the first detailed measurements of the upper atmosphere's hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon, which back in the day would have appeared as water vapor and carbon dioxide two potent gases for trapping heat near the surface.

This would have allowed liquid water to remain stable on the surface, providing potential habitats for microbial life.

Following its arrival at Mars Sept. 21, the craft also recorded the passage of a blast of energetic particles that erupted from the sun on Sept. 30 in an event known as a coronal-mass ejection, the most powerful solar storms that the sun generates. Such storms are thought to have played an important role in altering Mars' climate by depositing large amounts of energy in the upper atmosphere, splitting water and CO2 molecules and ejecting the hydrogen into space.

MAVEN,short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution,is still in its shakedown phase. All instruments are working but are in need of final adjustments before they begin to take measurements in a coordinated fashion starting in November.

Still, during its first few weeks onorbit, MAVEN has given the science team its first look at the structure of the extended upper atmosphere and the distribution of the three key atoms, some of which are escaping, said Bruce Jakosky, a University of Colorado astrobiologist and the mission's lead scientist, during a briefing Tuesday.

In addition, we're starting to see the processes that drive the escape, he said. Those processes are likely to have been more intense in the past, when a younger sun was more active than it is today.

The team is seeing these clues to Mars' atmospheric history with unexpected clarity.

For instance, MAVEN's Imaging UltravioletSpectrograph recorded an extended, if tenuous, envelope of hydrogen atoms around Mars that extends as far as 21,000 miles from the planet easy pickings for stripping, because the atom is so light and thus is less tightly bound by the planet's gravity than is oxygen or carbon.

While MAVEN showed that Mars holds the upper atmosphere's inventory of carbon and oxygen much closer to its gravitational vest, the craft also revealed an extended envelope of oxygen above the sunlit hemisphere. This so-called hot oxygen has been energized through photochemical reactions that the sun's light triggers. Some of this extended oxygen gets stripped from Mars, as well.

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NASA's MAVEN: First results from mission to Mars dazzle scientists

NASA's Maven spacecraft snaps 'unprecedented' images of Mars

NASA's latest spacecraft sent to study the Martian atmosphere is already collecting data.

NASA's latest spacecraft sent to study the Martian atmosphere is already collecting data.

NASA scientists announced this afternoon that its Maven (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft is securely in orbit around Mars, and all of its instruments are working well.

The orbiter, which entered Mars' orbit on Sept. 21, has already sent back images of what NASA scientists are calling a "storm" of energetic solar particles around Mars, giving researchers unprecedented ultraviolet images of oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon coronas surrounding the Red Planet,

"After this afternoon, all of its instruments will be on much of the time," said Bruce Jakosky, the Maven principal investigator. "The aim of our activities right now is to get to the start of science mapping and that will be in early to mid November."

Today, Maven is in the midst of a six-week commissioning period, where all of its instruments are turned on and tested. It's also the time when the spacecraft goes through a series of maneuvers to put it into the specific orbit needed to do its scientific work.

NASA officials have carried out four of the seven maneuvers that will get Maven into its ultimate orbit. So far, Jakosky said, there have been "no problems whatsoever" in Maven's commissioning.

The spacecraft's mission is to understand the current structure and dynamics of Mars' upper atmosphere. Scientists are looking to find out what caused the planet's atmosphere to thin and how that loss influenced the climate history of the planet. They're also looking for clues as to why Mars didn't hold onto its water and become a lush planet like Earth.

Scientists excitedly reported that as they've been testing Maven's instruments it already has begun collecting data and sending back better images than they had expected.

"They look gratifyingly like the models we put together for the last year," said Justin Deighan, the Maven team member in charge of the orbiter's remote sensing. "But the quality of the data was better than we were expecting. The ability to see the high-altitude oxygen -- we were hoping for it, but we couldn't have expected to get that good of an image."

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NASA's Maven spacecraft snaps 'unprecedented' images of Mars

NASA's Maven spacecraft gets first look at Mars' atmosphere

First images reveal storm of energetic solar particles on Mars Hoped mission will explain how the martianatmosphere'escaped' leaving a barrenplanet

By Mark Prigg for MailOnline

Published: 18:36 EST, 14 October 2014 | Updated: 18:44 EST, 14 October 2014

It is a mission set to solve the mystery of what happened to the atmosphere on Mars.

Nasa's Maven spacecraft has given scientists their first glimpse of the upper atmosphere of the red planet, which has baffled them for decades.

It is hoped the craft can explain why the red planet lost most of its atmosphere.

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Unprecedented ultraviolet images of the tenuous oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon coronas surrounding the Red Planet, taken by Nasa's Maven spacecraft

The hydrogen and oxygen coronas of Mars are the tenuous outer fringe of the planet's upper atmosphere, where the edge of the atmosphere meets space.

In this region, atoms that were once a part of carbon dioxide or water molecules near the surface can escape to space.

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NASA's Maven spacecraft gets first look at Mars' atmosphere

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