NASA cuts ISS spacewalk due to spacesuit trouble
NASA cuts ISS spacewalk due to spacesuit trouble
Carbon dioxide levels were beginning to rise in an astronaut's suit.

Washington: Problems with a spacesuit has caused NASA to cut short a spacewalk outside the International Space Station.

Problems with a system that removes carbon dioxide from the air in astronaut Chris Cassidy's spacesuit caused mission control to end the spacewalk at 2031 GMT on Wednesday after five hours and 59 minutes. Carbon dioxide levels were beginning to rise in his suit, but he was not in any imminent danger, NASA said. The spacewalk was to have lasted about six and a half hours.

Cassidy and fellow US astronaut Dave Wolf spent the spacewalk changing batteries on one of the station's solar panels. Because of the spacesuit problems they were able to swap out just two of four batteries that were to be exchanged during the spacewalk. A third old battery was removed, but they did not have time to install a new one when the spacewalk was cut short.

Each solar panel on the station has six batteries, and the panels' other batteries will be swapped during a spacewalk later in the mission.

NASA plans to retire the ageing fleet of shuttles at the end of next year.

The spacewalkers also removed insulation from Japanese experiments and moved handrails on the outside of the ISS.

It was the third of five planned spacewalks during the mission that brought a new porch to the Japanese Kibo laboratory. The four-tonne porch on the station's Japanese laboratory will be used to expose scientific experiments to the extremities of space through X-ray cameras and studies of cosmic dust.

The next spacewalk, which is also to focus on battery work, is set for Friday.

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