Astronauts take spacewalk to find ammonia leak
Astronauts take spacewalk to find ammonia leak, space station dodges junk despite malfunction
Two astronauts are spacewalking outside the International Space Station in an attempt to find an ammonia leak in a critical radiator system.
Station commander Sunita Williams and Japanese crewmate Akihiko Hoshide ventured out Thursday morning. They will isolate plumbing to help flight controllers locate the leak and open a spare radiator.
Their spacewalk got under way just hours after the orbiting lab had to dodge a piece of space junk.
On Wednesday evening, thrusters on a docked Russian supply ship were fired to move the space station out of harm's way. But a computer error caused the thrusters to malfunction, and the station did not reach the desired altitude.
NASA says the station and its six residents are safe despite their lower-than-intended orbit. The menacing debris is a satellite fragment.
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