NASA’s first-ever all-woman spacewalk was a success – TechCrunch

Authored by techcrunch.com and submitted by totatree

NASA astronauts Christina H. Koch and Jessica Meir made history today, taking part in the first-ever spacewalk in the agency’s history featuring only women. The two astronauts ventured outside of the International Space Station in order to effect a repair on a failed power controller for the station, during a spacewalk that began at around 7:50 AM ET Friday morning and ended at around 2:55 PM ET Friday afternoon.

This historic event happened seven months after its original intended target date, after that attempt had to be scrubbed because the ISS was missing a medium-sized spacesuit that one of the two woman would need. Astronaut Anne McClain was going to take part alongside Koch at that time, but McClain’s time on the station ended in June. McClain attempted to make a large-sized suit work, but her mobility was too limited.

NASA sent up a second medium spacesuit in October to ensure that they wouldn’t encounter a similar problem a second time around, but rightly faced criticism for the apparent discrimination of having enough suits to ensure multiple men could spacewalk, but not multiple women. The agency seems to have a genuine interest in curbing any perception of discrimination inherent in its spacesuit program, however, and emphasized that the spacesuits designed for its Artemis Moon mission program are designed to provide maximum mobility for astronauts of all shapes and sizes.

This mission is a tremendous achievement not just for NASA and the astronauts that took part, but for all human space exploration, marking the first time there’s ever been a two-woman spacewalk. Definitely an exciting and momentous event, and once NASA makes the replay available, we’ll provide it above.

ninelives1 on October 19th, 2019 at 14:59 UTC »

I think Jessica Meir said it best herself

You know, for us, this is really just us doing our job. It's something we've been training for, for six years, and preparing for. And so, it didn't really, you know -- for us, it's just coming out here and doing our job today. And we were the -- we were the crew that was tasked with this assignment.

At the same time, we recognize that it is a historic achievement, and we do, of course, want to give credit to all of those that came before us. There has been a long line of female scientists, explorers, engineers, and astronauts, and we have followed in their footsteps to get us where we are today. We hope that we can provide an inspiration to everybody, not only [Inaudible], but to everybody that has a dream and has a big dream and that is willing to work hard to make that dream come true -- something that all of us that have made our way up here have done all throughout our lives.

For them and many other people, it really shouldn't matter that they are women. But at the same time, I think it's worth recognizing we're at a point where the are enough women in the astronaut corps for this to happen. I wasn't really a fan of a lot of the misreporting arrive the whole suit size fiasco earlier this year, or the intensity with which they emphasize the all women aspect, but I still think it's awesome that young women have a pretty much equal opportunity to become an astronaut as their male counterparts, and this is just one indication of that.

Machismo01 on October 19th, 2019 at 14:27 UTC »

I am so jealous of these two astronauts. Just to float in space for a moment.

NASATVENGINNER on October 19th, 2019 at 13:06 UTC »

Of course it was. These are NASA trainer astronauts. Best of the best of the best. These people are so highly motivated they make us regular folks sloth-like. 14 years of working with them has taught me that these folks have “The Right Stuff” and more. Well done, again