MIT Technology Review, USA: The ISS has been dealing with the air leak for over a year. First discovered in September 2019 when NASA and its partners observed a slight dip in air pressure, the problem has never posed a threat to crews on board. It was only in August after ground crews noticed the leak was getting worse, that an investigation was launched to finally find the source and remedy the problem.
Since then, American astronaut Chris Cassidy and Russian cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner have spent multiple weekends hunkered in a single module while they close the rest of the station’s hatches and make measurements of the air pressure changes in the other modules. After several of these weekend astronaut slumber parties, mission control determined the location of the leak was the Zvezda module (which provides life support to the Russian side of the station), leading to Monday night’s search party.
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The ISS always loses a tiny bit of air, and that simply requires replacing the nitrogen and oxygen tanks during regular resupply missions. But the fact that the leak was getting worse would require the tanks to be replaced sooner than expected. It also means the hole that’s allowing the leak may have gotten bigger, and could still grow if not dealt with soon.
“These leaks are predictable,” Sergei Krikalyov, the executive director of Russia’s crewed space program, said in televised comments. “What’s happening now is more than the standard leakage and naturally if it lasts a long time, it will require supplies of extra air to the station.”
To find the exact location of the leak in Zvezda so it can be repaired, Cassidy and his crewmates will have to spend some time floating around the module with a handheld device called an ultrasonic leak detector, which spots frequencies that are emitted by airflow as it rushes out small holes and cracks. Noise on the station can make it more difficult to detect these frequencies, and the crew may have to run through areas a few times to actually find the source. One company wants to improve on this strategy by deploying an automated robot that can “listen” for leaks and identify them in real-time, without the need of a human hand. Once they have found the source of the leak, they will patch it up with a kit using epoxy resin.
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Leaks can also occur in other ways besides a loss of oxygen. The ISS has previously dealt with ammonia leaks coming from the station’s cooling loops. Since ammonia is toxic to humans, such leaks require immediate action, involving lengthy spacewalks to identify holes in the coolant system and repair them.
The ongoing issue goes to show that even a spacecraft as well designed and protected as the ISS is not invulnerable. And as we see more countries and companies send humans on crewed missions into orbit, such leaks will be a much more common occurrence. Not every spacecraft will be as resistant to the problems as the ISS.
There are a couple of major culprits for how a leak forms on a spacecraft. The most high-profile ISS leak in recent memory was found in August 2018—a 2-millimeter hole on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft docked to the station at the time. That hole appears to have been the result of a drilling error made during manufacturing (although Russia’s space agency has been cagey about exactly what caused it). The mystery of that leak was great fodder for conspiracy theorists, but the fact that the hole was accidentally made by a drill was lucky. A hole like that is clean and precise, and not very susceptible to cracks or expansion.
But when the ISS springs a leak without a clear cause, the major suspect is a haphazard collision with a micrometeoroid or small piece of debris (some just millimeters or less in size). Objects in Earth’s orbit zip around at extremely high speeds. The International Space Station, for example, has average speed of 7.66 kilometers per second, or over 17,000 mph. Some micrometeoroids in space whiz through at over 20,000 mph. At those ultra-high speeds, even tiny objects that are smaller than a centimeter can absolutely shred larger objects, like a bullet from a gun. That sort of messy destruction can leave behind cracks or structural damage that propagates through the rest of the spacecraft hull or pierce through the ammonia coolant system.
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