today they are to be feeling pretty proud of themselves as this has been a nearly flawless performance. looking above us, we are 250 miles up. the astronauts have completed the primary tasks and are now doing a little get ahead work and tidying up. soon they will make their way back into the airlock. the american astronauts climbed out of the hatch for just about 8:00 a.m. eastern time this morning after setting up the workstation they went into very important upgrading action. today s microgravity mission replaced old nickel hydrogen batteries with newer more powerful lithium ion batteries for the power channel on one of the solar arrays. the astronauts today just moving these new and old batteries around like feathers, even though they weigh more than 400 pounds on earth. that s with the help of weightlessness. here s what they look like without the spaces. he s from kansas, and he was one of the astronauts involved in
though everything is attached with ropes and small wheels you re always worried for a while i thought i d lose the bag with all the tools for a minute or two my heart was in my mouth about what i mean we re familiar with all these disaster scenarios but of course we do everything we can to make sure they don t actually occur you don t think about it all the time either keep you from sleeping. one of many lasting memories. as with any exceptional experiences the astronaut senses are in turmoil and they have trouble fixing all of these impressions in their memory. section. in the airlock peggy and all it help the two astronauts divest their equipment to mark his scares just completed his first spacewalk. work to.
even though everything is attached with ropes and small real you re always worried . for a while i thought i d lose the bag with all the tools for a minute or two my heart was in my mouth about what i mean we re familiar with all these disaster scenarios but of course we do everything we can to make sure they don t actually occur you don t think about it all. neither you from sleeping. one of many lasting memory. as with any exceptional experiences the astronaut senses are in turmoil and they have trouble fixing all these impressions in their memory. back to the work that marks action. in the airlock peggy and all egg help the two astronauts divest their equipment. scares just completed his first space walk. it works to.
softball children only go to school if their parents can pay if not they stay at home or if they are they help their mothers wash the stones or let the airlock and . the men take the socks to the washing area. there the rocks are cleansed from dust and dirt. and this is the women s responsibility. cuts. only after washing can valuable or be separated from worthless rock fragments. many children go with their mothers to the washing area they ve never been to school. they spend the time scraping up leftover bits of cobalt.
options that they have. and none of them are easy. they are all risky. the one, of course, that has received the most attention, it seems to be maybe the only scenario that may work is the idea that boys would swim out. the divers spent days trying to prepare the environment for that scenario, where they have placedox gen tanks and ropes, in trying to figure out how they would be able to latch them to each boys and swim out together, buddy dive. another option that was introduced today is the one that mentioned on twitter the other day, the idea to put a tube into the tunnels and inflate it, used with a system with air locks, where the boys can come out, and at least supplies can go in. the two main concerns that officials are wrestling with for