Sick astronaut completes spacewalk

February 13, 2008

It was a chance for Hans Schlegel to prove himself.

Never before in 27 years of space shuttle history was an astronaut replaced on a spacewalk and then given a second chance.

Looking and sounding fit, Schlegel and Rex Walheim completed their primary job halfway through the nearly seven-hour spacewalk: removing a depleted nitrogen tank from the space station and installing a full one weighing 550 pounds. The high-pressure nitrogen gas is needed to flush ammonia through the station's cooling lines.

As soon as the new tank of nitrogen was powered up, Mission Control radioed up the news along with congratulations for the spacewalkers' "great work."

"Hot dog!" said Walheim.

The spacewalk began, coincidentally, as the linked shuttle Atlantis and the station soared more than 200 miles above Cologne, Germany.

"Hello to all the people of Germany," Walheim said. "What a pleasure it is to be up here spacewalking with one of your native sons, Hans Schlegel."

Noted Schlegel: "It's great to be a part of an international team ... doing research in space."

It was the first spacewalk ever for the 56-year-old Schlegel. He was supposed to go out on the first spacewalk of the mission to help hook up Europe's space station lab, Columbus, which was ferried up by Atlantis. But he became ill after reaching orbit last week, and installation were delayed by one day, to Monday, and he was replaced by a U.S. colleague.

Neither Schlegel nor anyone else at the European Space Agency or NASA will say what was wrong with him. Schlegel has said it's a private medical matter.

His crewmates offered encouragement as the spacewalk passed the five-hour mark and Schlegel struggled to put covers on the Columbus lab's protruding pins.

"Hey, Hans, you're doing great work. Take your time and pace yourself," shuttle pilot Alan Poindexter radioed from inside.

Once Schlegel completed the chore, one of the crew called out to him: "Outstanding work on Columbus today, thanks a lot ... and it's great to see you outside my friend."

Replied Schlegel: "It's a pleasure to work on it."

One more spacewalk is planned for Atlantis' space station visit.

On Friday, Walheim and Stanley Love - Schlegel's replacement on Monday - will hang scientific experiments on the outside of Columbus.

Atlantis will remain at the space station until Monday. Mission managers on Wednesday decided to keep the shuttle there an extra day so its seven astronauts can help with Columbus' setup.

That makes for a 13-day flight, with touchdown now set for Feb. 20. Atlantis' thermal shielding has been completely cleared for re-entry.

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