CCTV

Headline News

World

Astronauts set up new Columbus lab

The European Space Agency waited years to see Columbus fly. The lab was supposed to go up in 1992 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the sailing of Christopher Columbus, but space station and then shuttle problems delayed everything.

The European Space Agency's Columbus module is seen at the lower right at its new installed location perpendicular to the Harmony module of the International Space Station in this image from NASA TV February 12, 2008. [Agencies]
The European Space Agency's Columbus module is seen 
at the lower right at its new installed location 
perpendicular to the Harmony module of the International
Space Station in this image from NASA TV February 12, 
2008. [Agencies]

The addition of Columbus expanded the almost 10-year-old space station to eight rooms. It was attached directly to the Harmony compartment that arrived last fall. Another of Harmony's docking ports will be occupied by Japan's new lab once it launches in the spring.

Additional work on the lab's exterior will be performed during a second spacewalk on Wednesday and a third on Friday. Unless flight surgeons object, German astronaut Hans Schlegel is expected to make Wednesday's spacewalk, along with Walheim.

Schlegel was supposed to float outside with Walheim to help with Columbus' hookup, but got sick following last week's liftoff and was replaced by Love. The last-minute switch in crew prompted NASA to delay Columbus' installation by a day and lengthen Atlantis' space station visit.

U.S. and European space officials have not divulged the illness, and Atlantis commander Stephen Frick dodged the issue when interviewers from Fox News Channel's Fox and Friends asked about Schlegel's health.

He said Schlegel was busy getting Columbus getting ready "so we can go in and start working in the lab."

The astronauts also participated in a chat with music impresario Quincy Jones and radio talk show host Tavis Smiley. Astronaut Leland Melvin, a pianist, carried into orbit a recording of Jones' 1969 Grammy Award-winning Walking in Space.

Melvin said he believes Jones' music inspires the kind of creativity that will one day lead astronauts to Mars and beyond.

"It has something that reaches into your soul and it makes you think," he said. "It makes you wonder. That's exactly what we need to do."

<< 1 2 3 4 5 >>