ESA title
Moving Leonardo
Science & Exploration

Space Station remodelling

28/05/2015 13188 views 117 likes
ESA / Science & Exploration / Human and Robotic Exploration / International Space Station

The International Space Station’s Permanent Multipurpose Module was detached and moved by the main robotic arm to another place on the orbiting laboratory yesterday.

Installing Leonardo
Installing Leonardo

This delicate operation required moving and rotating the 10-tonne Leonardo module from the Unity node to the Tranquility node.

NASA astronauts Terry Virts and Scott Kelly finished unbolting the module, closed the hatch and checked for leaks before the move. They will reopen the hatch at its new location on Tranquility after more leak checks.

The change is part of a long line of tasks to allow the Station to berth more visiting spacecraft – Leonardo’s move frees a docking port. Astronauts will install international docking adapters later this year during spacewalks to welcome new types of vessels for astronauts and cargo.

The 16 m-long robot arm was commanded from Earth by mission controllers in Quebec, Canada and Houston, USA, during the three-hour operation.

Leonardo’s history

Inside Leonardo
Inside Leonardo

Leonardo was built and designed by Italy’s ASI space agency to transport cargo and equipment to the Space Station inside NASA’s Space Shuttle. Modified to improve its shielding and visibility to visiting craft, it was attached permanently to the Station in 2011 after visiting the outpost seven times.

Leonardo is used for storing cargo bags, spare parts and food. One cargo rack is reserved for astronauts to use as a personal locker for their clothes, personal hygiene material and other belongings.

In exchange for supplying Leonardo, NASA agreed that ASI could send astronauts to the Station. One of these flights is now being filled by ESA’s Samantha Cristoforetti.

The crew might need some time to reorient themselves with the new layout. One of the jobs for the remodelling is to stick new signs on the module’s walls to reflect the new arrangement.

Leonardo arriving at Station
Leonardo arriving at Station

Related Articles

Samantha back on Earth
Science & Exploration

ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti back on Earth

11/06/2015 38355 views 173 likes
Read
Samantha, Terry and Anton
Science & Exploration

ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti returning home

08/06/2015 17569 views 87 likes
Read
Moving Leonardo
Science & Exploration

Space Station remodelling

28/05/2015 13188 views 117 likes
Read
Samantha
Science & Exploration

Samantha’s longer stay on Space Station

12/05/2015 24202 views 129 likes
Read
Dragon capture
Science & Exploration

Second Dragon, fruit flies and fresh coffee for Samantha

22/04/2015 8515 views 86 likes
Read
Mission X students
Agency

Mission X comes to a close with a call from space

25/03/2015 3385 views 27 likes
Read
Samantha working on Airway Monitoring
Science & Exploration

Testing astronauts’ lungs in Space Station airlock

09/03/2015 12206 views 91 likes
Read
Dragon approaches Station
Science & Exploration

Fresh supplies and experiments for Samantha

13/01/2015 9742 views 83 likes
Read
Soyuz TMA-15M approaches Station
Science & Exploration

ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti arrives at Space Stati…

24/11/2014 24461 views 100 likes
Read
Samantha in Soyuz
Science & Exploration

Samantha set for Space Station

21/11/2014 26050 views 84 likes
Read
POP3D printer
Enabling & Support

Europe’s 3D printer set for Space Station

13/11/2014 52433 views 173 likes
Read
Samantha spacewalk training
Science & Exploration

Samantha’s mission has a name: Futura

09/12/2013 8099 views 31 likes
Read
Entraînement
Science & Exploration

ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti set for Space Station …

03/07/2012 6323 views 3 likes
Read
Entraînement
Science & Exploration

Samantha Cristoforetti

356347 views 1252 likes
Read
Soyuz TMA-15M, Futura mission patch, 2014
Science & Exploration

Samantha’s Futura logo

22/01/2014 9386 views 65 likes
Read

Related Links

Related Links