2/27/2006

Next ISS Commander's Spacewalk Golf Shot Raises Concerns

By Todd Halvorson
FLORIDA TODAY
Posted: 27 February 2006
1:36 p.m. ET

CAPE CANAVERAL - A spacewalking Russian cosmonaut plans to hit a golf shot outside the International Space Station this summer as part of a publicity campaign that already has raised safety concerns.

Clad in a cumbersome spacesuit and anchored to a specially designed tee box, Pavel Vinogradov will hit a six-iron drive along side the station's Russian segment, taking great care not to hook the ball into the outpost.

Nataliya Hearn, president and chief executive officer of Element 21 Golf Co., said Russian Federal Space Agency officials initially were concerned that fragile solar panels jutting from the station's Russian crew quarters might be struck.

But an extensive Russian test program -- one involving veteran cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev -- subsequently showed the golf shot in space would be safe, Hearn said.

"If they were not confident that there would not be any safety issues with the structural components of the International Space Station, they would never have gone ahead and approved the full mission," she said.

NASA managers are aware of the plans and are reviewing the safety issues.

The ball is expected to remain in orbit for three to four years.

Space debris is one of the most dangerous threats to the station.

Even a tiny fragment of aluminum would strike with the same force as a rifle bullet. A hit from debris the size of a golf ball flying at six miles per second could be catastrophic.

Previous NASA risk analyses show there is a one in 200 chance in any given year of losing the $100 billion station to a debris hit that penetrates the hull of the outpost.

Based in Toronto, Element 21 manufactures golf clubs made of Scandium, a metal alloy used to build Russian MiG and Sukhoi fighter jets and Russian segments of the station. The alloy is lighter and stronger than titanium, graphite or steel.

A "launch platform" was developed along with a spring-like space tee that would hold a golf ball in weightlessness yet release it when struck, Hearn said.

Engineers also had to determine the best place to mount the platform, and the best direction to drive the ball, to avoid hitting the station, Hearn said.

A gold-plated Element 21 six-iron and several golf balls were hauled to the station last September on a Russian space freighter. The golf shot tentatively is slated to take place during a spacewalk in late July.

The ball is expected to travel up to 2.1 billion miles before it drops back into the atmosphere and burns up.

"In essence, it's going to be the longest drive ever hit," company spokesman Joe Wieczorek said.

Element 21 is linking the drive to moonwalker Alan Shepard's golf outing during the Apollo 14 mission 35 years ago this month.

Hearn declined to disclose the value of the company's contract with the Russian space agency. The ball is equipped with transmitters that will enable golfers to follow its flight around the world at the company's Web site, www.e21golf.com. Video from the shot also will be used in a television commercial.

http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/ft_060227_exp13_golf.html

3 comments:

Sacul said...

Why do cosmonaut golfers always carry two spacesuits with them ?

Just in case they get a hole in one.

Exist-Dissolve said...

As is expected, your wit exceeds all expectations! Delicious pun!

Anonymous said...

Good one! How about some more material, sacul?