International Space Station Gyroscope Fails
b00m3rang writes "Reuters reports that one of the three working gyroscopes that keep the international space station stable and in the right position stopped working, just hours after a new two-man crew moved in for a half-year stay."
All they need to do is a spacewalk out and restart it.
He stressed, however, "We're not dealing with a safety issue," and added it would take several weeks to determine when to schedule the spacewalk.
There are two gyroscopes still functioning, and that is enough to stabilize the station, Suffredini said. If one of these remaining gyroscopes fails, the station will rely on thrusters to keep it steady.
Too bad they can't do that for Hubble too.
(\_/)
(O.o) This is Bunny. (> <)
I wonder why they would place the circuit breakers outside the space station. If those ciruit breakers are like anything in my house, they go out all the time. Or maybe it is just my power company with all the brown outs in the summer.
I'm glad the story says this is not a critical system or a threat to the astronauts. Still, I wonder why the circuit breaker is not in a place easy to get to.
This gives me another idea. I wonder if they have a special escape pod attached to the space station, so if some critical system goes, they can escape.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
This makes you wonder what specification of hardware gets used in spacefaring vehicles/structures.
It seems that over history, the spacefaring versions of our technology are quite inferior to what we have planet-side. On typical space vehicles, this is because the vehicles were built so long ago. The ISS is a relatively new invention, and the number of bangs, bumps and hiccups seems to be more or less consistant with it's much older counterparts.
On a sidenote, anyone know if it has enough mass to impact earth's surface if it should come down?
Did you phrase it that way because you're a professional reporter and are used to getting paid to scare people into buying the crap you write, or are you just being a troll?
I agree, and am similarly irritated.
Posting deliberately misleading stories is enough to get a Foe rating from me, at least.
May we never see th
The article says that if another fails, they will have to use thrusters to keep the thing stable. So can someone perhaps explain to me what the gyroscopes physically do to keep it stable?
-- Even if a god did exist, why the fsck should I worship it?
Were they made by Americans or Russians (or some other nation)?
Up to now Russian parts have failed the most or were the furthest behind schedule. Is this one an American fault?
The ISS is currently running on 2 out of 4 gyroscopes.
If another fails, the ISS might start a gradual rotating acceleration or, at the very best, just slightly wobble in it's orbit.
If this occurs, the ISS will never be repaired, as the shuttle (or Soyouz for all that matters) will not be able to dock with the ISS.
This could be good news for Taco Bell!
AFAIK, the only axis a gyro can't be used to control is it's spin axis, so you should only need 2 gyros to control all 3 axis - anyone know why hubble needs 3 to keep it stable?
http://blog.nexusuk.org
Shall we compare cars to space shuttles on the basis of fatalities per occupied seat miles traveled? I would be surprised if, by that standard, Space Shuttles came out as the safest mode of transportation. But one thing is certain, they would absolutely school cars.
JPL has been marketing a fiber optic "gyroscope". It using inferometry in long fiber loop. Motion will cause a loop of light to doppler shift out of phase. Four of these coils, each on the face of a tetrahedron, will measure any rotational motion. No parts to break or wear out.
I presume NASA spacecraft are using mechanical gyros?