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Feature Neutral buoyancy EVA training
Although it is not exactly the same as being weightless in space, astronauts and cosmonauts can practice in neutral buoyancy how to move large objects. You can still feel the pull of gravity while neutrally buoyant, and the drag of moving about through the water slows down your movements – but it is the closest you can get to microgravity on Earth. Training in the NBL
The full spacewalk, or Extra Vehicular Activity (EVA), training for the ISS is traditionally done at NASA’s Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) at the Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, and at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, in Russia. With over 18 hours of EVA time in space under his belt, Swedish astronaut Christer Fuglesang is currently the most experienced spacewalker in the European Astronaut Corps.
With the assembly of the ISS in full swing, the EVA training schedule in the NBL is tight, the facility itself overbooked with operational and mission-related EVA training so the training schedule is compressed into three shifts a day. In addition, it will in future also be used for exploration related testing, which leaves little time for providing EVA skills training to ESA astronauts.
An assignment to take part in a spacewalk during a space mission depends on an EVA skills evaluation, which takes place at a very early stage of the EVA training programme in Houston. Those astronauts who handle their very first neutral buoyancy experiences in Houston well will be chosen to perform EVAs and receive the full-blown EVA training.
In an evaluation report, NASA’s Head of the EVA Branch in the NASA Astronaut Office, Dr Dave Wolf, praised EAC personnel for 'their innovation and hard work preparing this excellent course'. He attributed the course with 'considerable potential' and said "Other international partner astronauts not in full-time training might find this program beneficial prior to commencing suited EVA training [in Houston]."
Last update: 10 April 2008
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