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Total EVAs: | 10 | ||
Total EVA time: | 38h 40m |
No. | Date | Together with | Time | Main tasks and notes |
1 | 15.09.1998 | S. Avdeyev | 0h 30m |
Repairing cables in Spektr module |
2 | 10.11.1998 | S. Avdeyev | 5h 54m |
Mounting tools, deploying Sputnik-41 |
3 | 24.06.2004 | M. Fincke | 0h 13m |
Abort of a planned six-hour spacewalk
|
4 | 30.06.2004 | M. Fincke | 5h 40m |
Installing a new circuit breaker to restore
power to one of four gyroscopes that help toorient the complex |
5 | 03.08.2004 | M. Fincke | 4h 30m |
Replacing several materials exposure experiment
packages and a thruster contamination monitor, installing reflectors and
communications equipment needed for the docking of a new European Space Agency
cargo ship |
6 | 03.09.2004 | M. Fincke | 5h 21m |
Installing three antennas on the exterior of the
Zvezda Service Module; replacing of a pump panel on the Zarya module;
installation of guides for spacesuit tethers on Zarya handrails |
7 | 05.06.2009 | M. Barratt | 4h 54m |
Preparing Pirs for the arrival of a new Russian
module called the Mini-Research Module 2, or
MRM2 |
8 | 10.06.2009 | M. Barratt | 0h 12m |
Interior spacewalk to the transfer compartment
between the Zvezda service module and the Zarya module for setting the stage
for the MRM2's launch and automated linkup. |
9 | 20.08.2012 | Y. Malenchenko | 5h 51m |
The cosmonauts moved a Strela-2 cargo boom from
the Pirs docking compartment to the Zarya module. |
10 | 10.08.2015 | M. Korniyenko | 5h 34m |
Photographic inspection of the station's Russian
segment, retrieval of an experiment, window cleaning and surface
sampling. |
Russia and the U.S. define
EVA
differently. Russian cosmonauts are said to perform
EVA
any time they are in vacuum in a space suit. A U.S. astronaut must have at
least his head outside his spacecraft before he is said to perform an
EVA. |