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Columbus docks with space station | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Europe's space laboratory, Columbus, has been unloaded from the space shuttle Atlantis and docked with the International Space Station (ISS). | |
The attachment of Columbus to the ISS was carried out by astronauts working outside and inside. | |
A spacewalk to help install the orbiting laboratory lasted nearly eight hours - longer than expected. | |
The outing was scheduled to take place on Sunday, but was delayed when spacewalker Hans Schlegel fell ill. | |
The US space agency (Nasa) has refused to elaborate on what was wrong with German astronaut Schlegel, but said it was not life-threatening. | |
The European Space Agency (Esa) astronaut was replaced during Monday's spacewalk by shuttle crew member Stan Love, who ventured into space with fellow American Rex Walheim. | |
"Welcome to spacewalking, buddy," Walheim said as Love made his way through the hatch for his first spacewalk earlier on Monday. | |
"It's awesome," Love replied. | "It's awesome," Love replied. |
Mr Schlegel was stuck inside during Monday's spacewalkSchlegel is expected to take part in the second outing of the mission on Wednesday. | |
The 12.8-tonne Columbus module was plucked from its berth in the Atlantis shuttle's payload bay at 1956 GMT by the station's robotic arm. The arm was operated by astronaut Leland Melvin, a former wide receiver in the US National Football League (NFL). | |
During Monday's spacewalk, Walheim and Love ended up falling an hour behind. They removed protective covers from Columbus and plugged in a grappling pin for the robot arm, along with completing some other tasks. | |
"Man, you guys have done an amazing job," shuttle commander Stephen Frick told the weary spacewalkers at the six-hour mark. | |
Routine inspection | Routine inspection |
Columbus cost about $2bn (£1bn) and has room for three researchers in fields ranging from crop breeding to the development of advanced alloys. | |
The lab is the first part of the ISS that Esa will control. | |
COLUMBUS FACTS Total length - 6.8mDiameter - 4.5mVolume - 75 cu mLaunch mass - 12.8tOperation - 3 crewCabin temp - 16-27CTotal power - 20kW Columbus: Sky-high science Building Columbus Installing Columbus Inside Columbus | |
Before docking with the space station on Saturday, astronauts aboard Atlantis guided the shuttle in a back-flip manoeuvre that allowed crew on the space station to photograph the shuttle's protective heat-resistant tiles. | |
Engineers on Earth will check the images for any possible damage that may have been done to the tiles during lift-off. | |
This became a routine safety measure after the shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entering the Earth's atmosphere in 2003. | This became a routine safety measure after the shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entering the Earth's atmosphere in 2003. |
The 7m-long (24ft), 4.5m-wide, 12.8-tonne laboratory will be manoeuvred into position by the shuttle's robotic arm, and docked to the station's Harmony Node 2 connector. | |
Esa astronaut Leopold Eyharts will be staying on the station to commission Columbus, a process that should take a few weeks to complete. | Esa astronaut Leopold Eyharts will be staying on the station to commission Columbus, a process that should take a few weeks to complete. |
Its installation will mean Esa becomes a full member of the orbital project. | Its installation will mean Esa becomes a full member of the orbital project. |
Atlantis was launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, and is due to return to Earth now on 19 February, a day's extension to the originally planned 11-day mission. | Atlantis was launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, and is due to return to Earth now on 19 February, a day's extension to the originally planned 11-day mission. |
Once the lab is in place, an intensive programme of research in weightless surroundings will begin. | Once the lab is in place, an intensive programme of research in weightless surroundings will begin. |
The experiments will also help researchers better understand the physiological demands of long-duration spaceflight, something that will be important if humans are ever to colonise the Moon or travel to Mars. | The experiments will also help researchers better understand the physiological demands of long-duration spaceflight, something that will be important if humans are ever to colonise the Moon or travel to Mars. |