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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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The lighter side of spacewalking

Posted: Tuesday, May 19, 2009 7:36 PM by Alan Boyle


NASA
Astronaut Mike Massimino grins as he looks in on his crewmates inside
Atlantis from the shuttle's payload bay. Fellow spacewalker Michael Good
and the Hubble Space Telescope can be seen in the background, with Earth
looming over the scene. Click on the image for a larger view.

Spacewalking is serious business, especially when you're working on a multibillion-dollar telescope, but there's room for a little whimsy and wonder as well.

Take astronaut Mike Massimino, for example: The shuttle Atlantis' current mission marked his second visit to the Hubble Space Telescope, making him one of the astronaut corps' more experienced telescope repair technicians. Yet he had to slog through two overtime spacewalks, both of which ranked among NASA's top 10 in duration (and probably difficulty as well). Heck, he even had to rip off one of Hubble's hand rails with his gloved hands!

Did that get him down? No way.

Toward the tail end of Sunday's eight-hour-plus spacewalk, he and spacewalking partner Michael Good were carrying on like a comedy team.

"I'm afraid to ask how long we've been out here," Massimino said.

"I think it's been about an hour, 45," Good said.

"That's about right," Massimino replied.

When Good helped Massimino move a cable out of the way before getting down to work, Massimino referred to the hapless MacGyverish character from "Saturday Night Live": "MacGruber, that's what you are."

Today, Massimino joked about the length of his spacewalks: "I thought I was getting paid by the hour, then I find out it doesn't make any difference. ... I'm a little disappointed about that."

In addition to the whimsy, Massimino found time to enjoy the wonders surrounding him as he worked: "At the end of my spacewalk, I had time to just look at the Earth, the most awesome sight my eyes have seen, undescribable," he wrote in one of his unprecedented Twitter postings from space.

It's not as if Massimino is checking his iPhone every few minutes from space for a new tweet: In fact, his short updates are passed down as secure e-mail from space, then plugged into his Twitter account by intermediaries at NASA. That indirect method is used because the space agency wants to head off the possiblity of hacking into the space shuttle's computer network.

Nevertheless, Astro_Mike has definitely made a name for himself on Twitter: He currently ranks No. 133 on a closely watched list of Twitterati (ahead of MarsPhoenix and Stephen Colbert but way behind Britney Spears). Today tons of questions were sent in via the Google Lunar X Prize's Twitter and Facebook accounts for Astro_Mike to answer, arguably setting the stage for the first social-networking Q&A in space.

Massimino isn't the only guy to have a little fun in space, of course: Who can forget Alan Shepard's golf swing during the Apollo 14 mission to the moon in 1971, or Harrison Schmitt singing "I Was Strolling on the Moon One Day" during Apollo 17 in 1972? The crew of the current Hubble mission broke out in song as well: As lead spacewalker John Grunsfeld rolled blankets of insulation onto the space telescope's exterior on Monday, a chorus of "Rollin', Rollin', Rollin'" from the "Rawhide" theme song could be heard over the radio link.

Some have pointed to the way astronauts dealt with the challenges of the mission's five spacewalks - including balky bolts, stray rivets and gyros that didn't fit - as evidence that tool-wielding humans will continue to be essential in space operations. You might be able to argue that future space telescopes, which are not designed for human service calls, will be cheaper in the long run. But there's no way those missions will be as entertaining.

Here are a few more must-see examples of astronauts indulging their lighter side:

  • Congratulations to Scott Parazynski, former NASA astronaut and spacewalker, who has just reached the summit of Mount Everest after a weeks-long trek. You can follow Parazynski's adventure via Twitter.

  • Watch Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata demonstrate his "magical flying carpet" aboard the international space station. Wakata also shows why folding laundry and putting in eye drops are such tricky tasks in zero-G.

  • You've already heard about the basketballs that Atlantis' crew brought into orbit (deflated, to save space). But have you heard about the home plate? Last year, astronaut Garrett Reisman carried some dirt from the pitcher's mound at Yankee Stadium into orbit on his space station mission. Not to be outdone, the Mets gave Massimino a home plate from Shea Stadium, circa 2007, to fly on Atlantis. Here's another report from NASA that talks about the items tucked in the astronauts' flight kit. (Tip o' the Log to CollectSpace)

  • One of the traditions for shuttle missions is for Mission Control to play wakeup songs for the crew members. Check out this Web page for the Hubble mission's playlist, usually accompanied by the explanation for why a particular song was picked. ("Stickshifts and Safetybelts," dedicated to spacewalker and former auto mechanic Drew Feustel, ranks among my favorites.)

What music would you like to wake up to in space? Feel free to add your musical suggestions - or any other observations about the lighter side of space travel - as a comment below.

Update for 10:05 p.m. ET May 19: X Prize founder Peter Diamandis is a middleman for the Twitter/Facebook Q&A with Massimino, and he asked the astronaut whether Atlantis' crew could see the moon. Here's the reply: "Peter - yes we can and it is awesome. You can sort of see it in 3D in space so it really looks like a planet out there, just awesome. Currently see about a half moon, and it[s] size is pretty constant except if you see it setting behind earth, and then the moon illusion has some effect, making it appear slightly larger."

Update for 11:12 p.m. ET May 20: How can spacewalkers work for hours at a time without going inside for a break? One of my colleagues at msnbc.com, Rich Shulman, pointed me to this HowStuffWorks discussion of the subject. And over at Bad Astronomy, Phil Plait touts this must-see video of Hubble floating away from Atlantis.


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Comments

Deep Purple's Space Truckin', no doubt about it...
i suggest "in the end" by linken park, "when i'am gone" by  doors down and numb by linken park
Also sprach Zarathustra featured in 2001 Space Odyssey.
I remember the docking sequence and the melody.. Absolutely haunting
Space Cowboy by Steve Miller.
Over The Rainbow/Wonderful World by Isreal Kamakawiwo'ole
how about "Space Lord" by Monster Magnet
Ya know, one has to have a sense of humor, when even the slightest nick in a space suit that causes a leak, means almost instant death to the astronaut.  All this stuff is so intricately engineered and well thought out that most observers have no point of reference.  Thank you, thank you, thank you, a thousand times over to all you engineers and support staff that make all this stuff really work.  I was 9 years old in July 1969, and remember watching CBS night and day covering the moon landing.  And certainly there have been times since then when I've been less captivated, but I've never ceased to be interested.  We all seem to remember the triumphs of manned spaceflight, and both the successes and failures should be celebrated, but let's not forget that those Martian rovers are still at work, many, many months beyond their design parameters.  I'm just a regular guy that happens to appreciate beautiful things; whether it be nature or man-made; and what Man has done in space is nothing short of spectacular.  From my heart, I love all of you that make it happen.
 
8 miles high by the Byrds
What is the fine for "littering" in SPACE? (I was thinking of the shuttle as a red VW micro bus...the telescope as "junk" (in 10 years...)and Officer "OBIE WAN KANOBIE" THE POLICE OF THE UNIVERSE....AND "ALICES RESTAURANT".) GREAT JOB!!!!
Break on Through  : The Doors
I always hoped if I became an astronaut that I could have been able to be on a spacewalk, assembling something on the ISS, listening to Glen Campbell's Wichita Linemen.
My best to all spacewalkers.
Can the astronauts sense the earth spinning in some way? (not related to songs, I am just so fascinated by all this space activity) Is there another site to go to for this information?
Oh for sure...Howard Stern on Sirius Satellite radio!!! Him and Artie Lange wake me like nothing else. Love those guys!!!
C'mon! Ground control to Major Tom. Space Oddity - David Bowie
"magic Carpet Ride", also played (will be?) by Zephram Cochran on the first warp drive ship.
Wanna Take you HIGHER ! !   by Sly and the Family Stone
Anything upbeat by Capercaillie - Coisich A Ruin, Beautiful Wasteland, Bonaparte, Alasdair Mhic Cholla Ghasda.

Shlomo Artzi's "Shir Baboker Baboker"
"8 Miles High" by Husker Du
Great article Alan!  I sure enjoyed watching the 5 spacewalks this past weekend fixing Hubble.  I was puzzled when Massimino got to that stuck bolt why NASA never heard of that Grabit screw/bolt extractor.  Now that was a tool missing from the astronaut's bag of tricks.  It was interesting watching them mess around with a stripped bolt for almost two hours before doing the brute force and ignorance routine of just breaking the bolt.  I was worried that not getting one of the NOBL's installed Sunday would be bad but Grunsfeld and Fuestel did a bang up job getting it on as well as the bonus blanket on bay 7.

It's a pity we won't be seeing anymore exciting Hubble repair missions and the work on the ISS is almost finished.  It's been exciting watching humans work in space constructing things or repairing Hubble.  I can't wait for the brand new pictures that Hubble can take now.  Excellent work Atlantis crew on fixing Hubble!
Lost In Space / Aimee Mann
Weight of the World / Chantal Kreviazuk
Old Devil Moon / Chet Baker
Beginnings / Chicago
Moonlight Serenade / Chicago
Night and Day / Chicago
Planet X / Christine Lavin
Speed of Sound / Coldplay
New Frontier / Donald Fagan
Here Comes the Sun / George Harrison
The Only Night / Ian Love
Constellations / Jack Johnson
Chiron Beta Prime / Jonathon Coulton
Skullcrusher Mountain / Jonathon Coulton
Last Night / The Mar-Keys
Here Comes the Sun / Nina Simone (Francois K remix)
Man on the Moon / R.E.M.
Black Hole Sun / Soundgarden
Telescope / Andy Hill and Renee Safier
Planet Claire / The B-52's
A Hard Day's Night / The Beatles
Ticket to Ride / The Beatles
It Came Out of the Sky / Creedence Clearwater Revival
Satellite / Dave Matthews Band
Gravity / Embrace
Mundos Diferentes [Different Worlds] / Gabby Villanueva
Terrapin Station Medley / The Grateful Dead
Sun Touch / Herbie Hancock
Rockit / Herbie Hancock
Across the Universe / Across the Universe Soundtrack
Universe & U / KT Turnstall
The Galaxy Song / Monty Python
Spirit in the Sky / Norman Greenbaum
Jupiter / An Pierle & White Velvet
Waling on the Moon / The Police
Tom Lehrer's The Elements / Jesse Dangerously
Aquarius / The 5th Dimension
Happier than the Morning Sun / Stevie Wonder

[I need a lot of songs, 'cause when I go up I plan on staying up there for a while]
Tho' it's probably been used, I suggest 'Rosket Man', by Elton John, as a wake-up.
I agree wholeheartedly with Donald II regarding his appreciation of the stellar nature of the Space Program. Forget the expense, technological advances, and just think of the ingenuity and overall awesomeness of the accomplishment. 100 years ago most people had not yet ridden in a car. What a great time to be alive!
Look at how much hazier and dirtier the atmosphere has become since at least 1999. Compare the images above and here
http://hubblesite.org/the_telescope/team_hubble/image.php?image=sm3a-fgs
Ground Control to Major Tom <<< I watched with awe thru pretty much all of the EVA's to repair the telescope.. Totally enthralled with their work, views of planet Earth, and the fact you can move a piece of equipment the size of a double wide refrigerator as effortlessly as a feather. The entire crew gets a big Thank You and Well Done from me and I cant wait for the New and Improved Hubbel to perform. Proud of the Atlantis Crew and all concerned !!
Kudos to those brave individuals who have given our wonderful, incomparable, space telescope a new lease on life.  Thank you to all the tax payers who coughed up money for this mission and the bureaucrats who gave it a thumb's up. May hubble's light continue to shine.
"With a Little Help From My Friends" by Joe Cocker.
Wake up Little Susie,  The Everly Brothers
Joy (Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring) - Apollo 100

Godspeed on your return STS-125.  Thanks for opening up the heavens a little more!
D.M. - you asked; "Can the astronauts sense the earth spinning in some way?"

They can not sense it moving below them, directly.  After all, they are traveling about 17,500 mph / 28,000 KPH, orbiting the Earth every 90 minutes or so.  It's like trying to observe the motion of a distant freighter when you are miles above it in a supersonic jet.  (Please ignore the ship's wake in that analogy.)

However, an observant astronaut would notice the change in the terminator line (the line separating the day and night sides of the planet), noting that a place they observed in daytime on the previous orbit was now in night.
The overture of Jesus Christ Superstar
All future satellites and telescopes will be use once and throw away, as only the shuttle could make possible the Hubble repairs and space station construction.

After 2010, NASA will be paying Russia $35 Million an astronaut for launching them in to space until we have the small Orion capsule ready to fly in 2015 (maybe?). And unlike the Russian and Chinese capsules which land on earth (land), our Orion will land in the water like the old Apollo.

I will miss the Shuttle very much.
The ISS and the Space Shuttle have set human space exploration back 40 years. I can't wait until some Gov't agency is put in charge of our health care system. This is a military project, pure and simple. That's why there hasn't been and never will be a Chinese visit the ISS.
For Eric, in Salinas, the stripped bolt on the STIS arm was quite large - it looked like a metric 6.5 or #12, but not as large as 1/4, socket head cap screw.
It was determined before launch that a stripped bolt removal tool would not be needed for such a large screw, as the possibilty of stripping it was viewed as very small.  Stripped bolt removal tools and specialized tool bits to drill off the heads were included for the smaller screws on the STIS panel. (but not needed)
I guess you can't plan for everything.
On Earth As It Is In Heaven by Ennio Morricone (sound track to the Mission)

My Thanks to every machinist, scientist and everyone in between for such a wonderful mission to watch and learn from. Thanks to MSNBC for making it possible to view this every day and night in real time via the web...
I love it! From some of the song titles I see there are a lot of responders that are still in awe of us being in Space in the first place.....we remember Sputnik, the dogs, and the monkeys that went up first....a time when flying in an airplane was a big deal!

My vote is the overture from Jesus Christ Superstar....turned up to the max.
Thank humanity for figuring out there was and is a place and idea called America where this and much more can happen!

First choice: The Rodeo Song by David Allan Coe (probably wouldn't be allowed), so ...

Second Choice: Fireball by Barry Gray.
"The ISS and the Space Shuttle have set human space exploration back 40 years."


There is *no* certainty that humans would have gone farther than LEO by now without them, either. Like it or not, Apollo was considered a 'done deal' by the mid 70's. There's no way to know what would have been proposed in the absence of the Shuttle, but in those times, there was *no* appetite for any other large manned program. And any of whatever you consider 'exploration' would've easily met the definition of 'large.'

In 1993, the ISS project came within one vote of cancellation. But I don't recall one member of Congress in that debate saying something like; "We should be spending this money on going back to the Moon, instead."

http://www.astronautix.com/craft/intation.htm

http://rs9.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d103:6:./temp/~bdms0h::
as always, a big thank you and salute to the astronauts, engineers, technicians and everyone in the shuttle program for making it happen so we can watch in realtime.
A few songs, among many, that come immediately to mind:

Fly From Heaven  - Toad The Wet Sprocket
Banditos         - The Refreshments
It's The End Of the World As We Know It  - R.E.M.
MUSIC SELECTION:

"Leave Out All The Rest," - Linkin Park
"By Myself," - Linkin Park
"Zyzzyx Road," - Stone Sour
"Dream On," - Kelly Sweet's remake
"Spaceman" by The Killers  
a big thank you to all the nasa people that made this mission possible and to the continuing success of all future missioins that they undertake. maybe steve miller "fly like a eagle"
Rush - Countdown, Def Leppard - Rocket
white lightning or orange blossom special
Artist: Chris Rice Song: And Your Praise Goes On. It is beautiful.
Every day is exactly the same - Nine Inch Nails.

Because earth just keeps on rolling around and around.


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