'Extra-vehicular activity' ('EVA') is work done by an
astronaut away from the Earth and outside of a
spacecraft. The term most commonly applies to an EVA made outside a craft orbiting Earth (a 'spacewalk') but also applies to an EVA made on the surface of the
Moon (a ''moonwalk''). In the later
lunar landing missions the
command module pilot did an EVA to retrieve film canisters on the return trip.
Due to the different designs of the early spacecraft, the
American and
Soviet space programs also define an EVA differently.
Russians define an EVA as occurring when a
cosmonaut is in a
vacuum. An American astronaut, in contrast, is not considered to have made an EVA until at least his head is outside the spacecraft. The term stand-up EVA (SEVA) is used for being partly outside.
EVAs may be either tethered (the astronaut is connected to the spacecraft, oxygen can be supplied through a tube, no propulsion is needed to return to the spacecraft) or untethered. When the tether performs life support functions such as providing oxygen, it is called an ''umbilical''. For untethered EVAs during space flight, capability of returning to the spacecraft is essential; see
Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU) and
Simplified Aid for EVA Rescue (SAFER).
EVA milestones
★ The first EVA was carried out by
Aleksei Leonov on
March 18,
1965 from the
Voskhod 2 spacecraft.
★ The first EVA by an American astronaut was made on
June 3,
1965 by
Edward White during the
Gemini 4 mission.
★ The first EVA that was a moonwalk rather than a spacewalk was made by American astronaut
Neil Armstrong on
July 20 1969 when the
Apollo 11 Lunar Module ''Eagle'' landed on the
Moon. He was joined by crewmate
Buzz Aldrin, and their EVA lasted 2 hours and 32 minutes.
★ The first untethered spacewalk was by American astronaut
Bruce McCandless II on
February 7 1984, during ''Challenger'' mission
STS-41-B. He was subsequently joined by astronaut
Robert L. Stewart during the 5 hour 55 minute spacewalk.
★ The first woman to perform an EVA was Cosmonaut
Svetlana Savitskaya on
July 25 1984 while aboard the
Salyut 7 space station.
★ The first American woman to make an EVA was
Kathryn D. Sullivan, who stepped into space on
October 11 1984 during
Space Shuttle ''Challenger'' mission
STS-41-G.
★ The first EVA by a non-Soviet, non-American astronaut was made on
December 9 1988 by
Jean-Loup Chrétien of
France during a three-week stay on the
Mir space station.
★ On
February 9 1995,
Bernard A. Harris, Jr. and
Michael Foale became the first
African American and the first
Briton, respectively, to perform an EVA.
★ The first EVA to perform an
in-flight repair of the Space Shuttle was by American astronaut
Steve Robinson on
August 3 2005, during "
Return to Flight" mission STS-114. Robinson was sent to remove two protruding gap fillers on the Space Shuttle
''Discovery'''s heat shield, after engineers determined they might cause damage to the shuttle upon re-entry. Robinson successfully removed the loose material while the ''Discovery'' was docked to the
International Space Station.
★ The longest EVA was 8 hours and 56 minutes, performed by
Susan J. Helms on
March 11,
2001.
★
Anatoly Solovyev, with 16 spacewalks, totaling 77 hours, 41 minutes EVA, holds the records for most spacewalks and greatest duration on EVA.
★ Captain
Michael Lopez-Alegria holds the all time American record for number of EVA's (10) and total EVA duration (67 hours and 40 minutes).
EVA hazards

During an untethered 'EVA' the astronaut is far from help.
An EVA is dangerous for a number of different reasons. The primary one is
collision with
space debris. Orbital velocity at 300 km above the Earth (typical for a
Space Shuttle mission) is 7.7 km/s. This is 10 times the speed of a
bullet, so the
kinetic energy of a small particle with a mass 1/100th that of a bullet (e.g. a fleck of paint or a grain of sand) is equal to that of a bullet. Every space mission creates more orbiting debris, so this problem will continue to worsen (see also
Kessler Syndrome).
Another reason for danger is that external environments in space are harder to simulate before the mission, though approximate simulations can be achieved at facilities like
NASA's
Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory. Space walks are avoided for routine tasks because of their danger. As a result the EVAs are often planned late in the project development when problems are discovered, or sometimes even during an operational mission. The exceptional danger involved in EVAs inevitably leads to emotional pressures on astronauts.
Other possible problems include a space walker becoming separated from their craft or suffering a spacesuit puncture which would depressurize the suit, causing
anoxia and rapid death if the space walker is not brought into a pressurized spacecraft quickly.
One astronaut has suffered a spacesuit puncture. During
STS-37, a small rod punctured the glove of one of the astronauts (the name is undisclosed, but it was either
Jerry L. Ross or
Jay Apt). However, the puncturing object, which stabbed the astronaut's hand as well, held in place, resulting in no detectable depressurization. In fact, the puncture was not noticed until after the space walkers were safely back inside ''
Atlantis''.
[1]
Aleksei Leonov's EVA did not pass smoothly, although this was not reported at the time. During the EVA, Leonov's suit had become overinflated to the point he could longer re-enter and seal the door of the
airlock. Because he was breathing pure oxygen, he was able to reduce his suit pressure to under 4 psi (28 kPa)
[1] and, with much effort, climb back inside.
For EVAs from ISS NASA now routinely employs a ''camp out'' procedure to reduce the risk of decompression sickness. This was first tested by the Expedition 12 crew. During a camp out, astronauts shut themselves in the airlock and lower the air pressure to 10.2 psi (70 kPa). The station is kept at 14.7 psi (101 kPa); spending a night at the lower air pressure helps flush nitrogen from the body, thereby preventing "the bends."
[2][3]
As of 2007, no catastrophic incident has ever occurred during an extra-vehicular activity, and no astronaut or cosmonaut has ever died during one. However, given the considerable hazards inherent in EVAs, and the resultant risk to astronauts, some scientists are working to develop tele-operated robots for outside construction work, to potentially eliminate or reduce the need for human EVAs.
2007 EVAs
This is a list of EVAs conducted or scheduled to be conducted in
2007.
See also
★
Space suit
★
Manned Maneuvering Unit
★
Orlan space suit
★
List of spacewalks
References
1. Human Exposure to Vacuum Gregory Landis
2. International Space Station Status Report #06-7
3.
Pass the S'mores Please! Station Crew 'Camps Out'
4.
Station Crew Members Wind Up Successful Spacewalk
5.
{{cite web | url = http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition14/exp14_eva7.html | title = Crew Completes Scheduled Spacewalk Tasks, and More | publisher = NASA
6.
International Space Station Status Report #07-08
7. Spacewalkers Successfully Retract Progress Antenna NASA
8.
Spacewalk Complete, Debris Panels Installed
9.
Cosmonauts Wrap Up Debris-Panel Spacewalk
10.
STS-117 MCC Status Report #07
11.
STS-117 MCC Status Report #11
12.
STS-117 MCC Status Report #15
13.
Shuttle Endeavour readied for rollout to launch pad
14. Station Crew Winds Up Ammonia Reservoir Jettison Spacewalk
External links
★
NASA JSC Oral History Project ''Walking to Olympus: An EVA Chronology'' PDF document.
★
NASDA Online Space Notes
★
Apollo Extravehicular mobility unit. Volume 1: System description - 1971 (PDF document)
★
Apollo Extravehicular mobility unit. Volume 2: Operational procedures - 1971 (PDF document)
★
Skylab Extravehicular Activity Development Report - 1974 (PDF document)
★
Analysis of the Space Shuttle Extravehicular Mobility Unit - 1986 (PDF document)
★
NASA Space Shuttle EVA tools and equipment reference book - 1993 (PDF document)
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