Skip to main content

Watch NASA’s animation previewing Tuesday’s spacewalk

Update on Tuesday, November 30: NASA has postponed Tuesday’s spacewalk at the space station after receiving a notification about nearby debris. A new date will be set once it has assessed the risk to the astronauts, and we’ll update here just as soon as we know.

In recent years NASA has made increasing efforts to engage with space fans, using social media to share information about missions both current and upcoming. The approach helps to spread the word about its work and also, it hopes, to inspire young people to get involved in science and engineering.

Recommended Videos

NASA’s latest offering, released this week, is a short animation (below) previewing an upcoming spacewalk at the International Space Station (ISS).

Expedition 66 Spacewalk 78 Animation - November 29, 2021

The spacewalk — NASA’s ninth this year — will be conducted by American astronauts Thomas Marshburn and Kayla Barron, with fellow ISS astronauts Raja Chari, Mark Vande Hei, and Matthias Maurer providing assistance from inside the space station.

NASA’s seven-minute animation offers a clear and concise overview of the work that will be carried out by Marshburn and Barron. Their main task is to replace a malfunctioning antenna to ensure reliable communications between the space station and controllers back on Earth.

As the animation shows, Canada’s Canadarm — a robotic arm — will also be utilized during the spacewalk, which NASA says is likely to take around six-and-a-half hours to complete.

This will be Marshburn’s fifth spacewalk, following four others in earlier ISS missions in 2013 and 2009. Barron, on the other hand, will be embarking on her first one.

The spacewalk will continue throughout most of Tuesday morning so you can drop by NASA’s livestream whenever you like to take a look at what’s going on. The space agency provides a live commentary, too, so you can fully understand what it is you’re looking at. For full details on times and how to watch, Digital Trends has you covered.

In the meantime, check out this collection of amazing images showing spacewalks from over the years.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
NASA turns off another of Voyager 2’s instruments to save power
Engineers work on NASA’s Voyager 2 at JPL in March 1977, ahead of the spacecraft’s launch that August. The probe carries 10 science instruments, some of which have been turned off over the years to save power.

The venerable Voyager spacecrafts are now nearly 50 years old, and having headed out beyond the orbit of Pluto and into interstellar space, the pair are the most distant man-made objects in the universe. But despite their incredible longevity and success, they are inevitably running low on power, so their operations have to be tweaked from the ground to enable them to run for as long as possible. Recently, NASA announced that it is turning off another of Voyager 2's science instruments to help maintain power for longer.

The command was sent to turn off Voyager 2's plasma science instrument on September 26, but the spacecraft is now so far away that it took 19 hours for the signal to leave Earth and arrive at Voyager, and a further 19 hours for the confirmation signal to arrive back at Earth. The operation went smoothly, according to NASA.

Read more
Watch how astronauts drink coffee in space
A cup of coffee in space.

How Do Astronauts Drink Coffee in Space?

Like many folks, astronauts enjoy a cup of joe from time to time, but the lack of gravity means that preparing and drinking it is a little different from how you do it back on terra firma.

Read more
Crew Dragon is about to fly with empty seats for the first time. Here’s why
A Falcon 9 rocket launches from California.

NASA and SpaceX are making final preparations for the Crew-9 astronaut flight to the International Space Station (ISS), which is set to launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, September 26.

But this will be the first of SpaceX’s 13 crewed flights to the ISS since the first one in 2020 where there will be two empty seats on the Crew Dragon spacecraft. And there’s a very good reason for that. Let us explain.

Read more