February 9, 2025

Amateur Astrophotographer Photographs NASA Astronaut Conducting Record-Breaking Space Walk – IFLScience

CLOSEWe have emailed you a PDF version of the article you requested.Please check your spam or junk folder You can also addnewsletters@iflscience.comto your safe senders list to ensure you never miss a message from us.CLOSEComplete the form below to listen to the audio version of this articleListenCancel and go backIFLScience needs the contact information you provide to us to contact you about our products and services. You may unsubscribe from these communications at any time.For information on how to unsubscribe, as well as our privacy practices and commitment to protecting your privacy, check out ourPrivacy PolicyAdvertisement GO AD FREE!ACCOUNTSIGN INSIGN OUTSearchBecome anIFLScience memberMY ACCOUNTTHE VAULTMY ACCOUNTTHE VAULTMAGAZINESIGN OUTJames FeltonJames FeltonSenior Staff WriterJames is a published author with four pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary.BookView full profileBookRead IFLScience Editorial PolicySenior Staff WriterFrancesca BensonCopy Editor and Staff WriterFrancesca Benson is a Copy Editor and Staff Writer with a MSci in Biochemistry from the University of Birmingham.BookView full profileBookRead IFLScience Editorial PolicyDOWNLOAD PDF VERSIONSuni Williams conducting a space walk, as photographed from below.Image Courtesy of Charline Giroud.DOWNLOAD PDF VERSIONAn amateur astrophotographer has captured an astonishing image of NASA astronaut Suni Williams conducting a record-breaking spacewalk outside the International Space Station (ISS).ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREELast week, NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore – famously “stranded” on the ISS after faults on the Starliner spacecraft – left the safety of the space station to conduct scientific work outside of it. As well as being pretty cool work with an incredible view, the Extravehicular Activity was a record-breaker.”Williams made history during last week’s spacewalk,” NASA explained in an Instagram post. “She surpassed former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson’s record for total spacewalking time by a female astronaut. Williams now has 62 hours, 6 minutes of total spacewalk time, fourth on NASA’s all-time list.⁣”While Williams took a selfie during the EVA, roughly 400 kilometers (250 miles) below, amateur astrophotographer and Screening Scientist at the University of Oxford, Charline Giroud, captured another angle of the walk.Suni can be seen as a tiny blob, about 8 pixels wide, at the very end of the robotic arm”I have been imaging the ISS with my telescope for almost four years as an amateur astrophotographer, and taking a picture of an astronaut during a spacewalk had been on my bucket list for quite a while,” Giroud told IFLScience. “On Thursday, Jan. 30, I finally had the opportunity to capture such a picture as the ISS passed over the UK twice while astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore were outside the station on an EVA, working on a radio frequency group disassembly.”On the first attempt, the space station was obscured by clouds.ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE”However, the second pass was successful as the sky magically cleared up. While tracking the ISS, I was also watching the spacewalk broadcast on NASA TV. At the beginning of the pass, I saw Suni on the Canadarm-2, moving from the airlock platform to another work site. She was separated from the station wall and perfectly illuminated by the sun,” Giroud continued. “I knew she would be clearly visible in the final picture. It was the perfect move at the perfect time! Suni can be seen as a tiny blob, about 8 pixels wide, at the very end of the robotic arm. Unfortunately, Butch Wilmore was in the shade of the platform and isn’t visible in the image.”During the walk, Williams and Wilmore removed hardware outside the space station and collected samples of surface materials near life support system vents as part of the ISS External Microorganisms program.”This investigation focuses on sampling at sites near life support system vents to examine whether the spacecraft releases microorganisms, how many, and how far they may travel,” NASA explains of the program. “This experiment could help researchers understand whether and how these microorganisms survive and reproduce in the harsh space environment and how they may perform at planetary destinations such as the Moon and Mars. Extremophiles, or microorganisms that can survive harsh environments, are also of interest to industries on Earth such as pharmaceuticals and agriculture.”international space station,iss,nasa,photography,astrophotography,Astronomy,spacewalk,amateur astronomylink to articlelink to articlelink to articleAdvertisement Advertisement Advertisement link to articlelink to articlelink to articleReceive weekly science coverage direct to your inbox© 2025 IFLScience. All Rights Reserved. RSS

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