US astronauts perform seven-hour spacewalk outside station

In their second spacewalk in two weeks, Commander Jeffrey Williams and Flight Engineer Kate Rubins left the station’s airlock around 8 a.m. EDT (1200 GMT) as the station orbited 250 miles (400 km) above Earth.

“It’s good to be out here,” said Rubins, 37.

On Aug. 19, Rubins and Williams installed a docking system to enable commercial space taxis currently in development to park at the station, breaking Russia’s monopoly on crew transport.

Test flights of Space Exploration Technology’s Crew Dragon capsule are expected to begin next year, followed by the debut of Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner in 2018.

It was not immediately known what impact, if any, the loss of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket during a routine prelaunch test in Florida on Thursday would have on the company’s other programs.

For Thursday’s spacewalk, the astronauts headed to the far end of the station to retract a radiator that was last used in 2012.

A Nasa TV video grab shows astronaut Jeff Williams making repairs and installing new equipment.

Folding up the panel will protect it from strikes by micrometeors and orbital debris, NASA flight director Zeb Scoville told an Aug. 24 news conference.

“We really want to be able to get it retracted and covered up so we can count on it in the future, should the need arise,” Scoville said.

Williams, making his fifth spacewalk, and Rubins then tackled several maintenance tasks, including installing a high-definition camera on the station’s truss so ground controllers can better inspect the Russian Soyuz capsules that ferry crew members to and from the station, a $100 billion project in which 15 countries are participating.

Williams, along with Russian cosmonauts Alexey Ovchinin and Oleg Skripochka, are scheduled to climb aboard one of the two Soyuz capsules docked at the station on Tuesday, ending their 172-day mission.

Williams, 58, will return home as NASA’s most-experienced astronaut. During his four spaceflights, including three stints aboard the space station, Williams surpassed the 520-day cumulative record of former U.S. astronaut Scott Kelly, with 534 days in orbit.

Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka holds the world record with 878 days in space.

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