It was the third spacewalk in as many weeks outside the orbiting lab. This time, it was on the Russian side of the house and went so well that it wrapped up more than two hours early.
Russian spaceman Alexander Samokutyaev used his left gloved hand to shove the antennas away one by one, five minutes apart. He paused dramatically before letting the second one loose, for a better camera view.
The dish antennas, up to 0.7 meters long, resembled white umbrellas. The first one spun as it drifted away.
A couple of hours earlier, spacewalker Maxim Suraev released a seismic experiment, essentially a panel stretching 1.8 meters long and 1.4 meters across.
"Three cheers," someone noted in Russian. "This is an event of some note."
The panel, shining yellow in the station spotlights, slowly spun in circles as it tumbled away into the blackness 418 kilometers up.
The experiment was launched in 2011 to monitor earthquakes and had completed its job. The antennas were launched in 2009 aboard a Russian mini-research module; they were determined to be in the way of future spacewalkers.
All three discarded items should orbit for several months, possibly even a year, before burning up in the atmosphere.
The Russian Space Agency, unlike NASA, routinely gets rid of old equipment by setting it loose in orbit.
The spacewalkers joked and chuckled as they worked to remove the antennas from the station's hull. As Samokutyaev repeatedly opened and closed his cable cutters, Suraev observed, "Don't cut my finger off."
"No, I think I will not do that. It's just too far away to walk to the station," Samokutyaev replied.
Their garbage work completed early, the spacewalkers turned their attention to inspection.
They collected samples from windows and elsewhere outside the Russian segment to check for engine exhaust and other materials.
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