Last Thursday the large new Russian space train station module, Nauka, finally docked with the International Space Station after several technical issues en route to the orbiting laboratory. However, the problems did not end there. About three hours after linking to the station, Nauka began firing its propulsion thrusters, throwing the space station off kilter .
This led NASA Mission Control in Houston to initiate “loss of attitude control” procedures on board the station, a contingency astronauts and flight controllers train for. Then, in concert along with flight controllers in Moscow, the particular teams commanded the station to fire its thrusters on the Russian segment of the space place, as well as a Progress supply vehicle attached to the laboratory. These combined actions prevented typically the station from tumbling too violently until Nauka exhausted its primary fuel supply.
Following this near miss, NASA hastily called a news conference and brought out key figures before the media, including human spaceflight chief Kathy Lueders and the leader of this International Space Station program, Joel Montalbano. Both said NASA and the Russian space corporation, Roscosmos, had the situation well in hand and downplayed the overall risk to the station plus the astronauts on board.