300 Miles Above Us, Astronauts Give The Space Station A New Door

Astronaut Kate Rubins and Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams speak during an interview aboard the International Space Station last month.i

Astronaut Kate Rubins and Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams speak during an interview aboard the International Space Station last month.

NASA via AP


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NASA via AP

Astronaut Kate Rubins and Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams speak during an interview aboard the International Space Station last month.

Astronaut Kate Rubins and Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams speak during an interview aboard the International Space Station last month.

NASA via AP

At about 8 a.m. ET today, far above the Earth, astronaut Jeff Williams floated out a hatch and then welcomed Kate Rubins into the void.

“OK Kate, come on out,” said Williams.

“OK, copy,” said Rubins.

And with that, the two Americans began a six-hour assignment to install a new docking port to the International Space Station. You can watch their progress:

Since 2011, when NASA retired its space shuttles, the government has paid the Russian space agency to rocket astronauts to the space station — at a cost of about $80 million per seat.

The new port will allow astronauts traveling with companies such as Boeing and SpaceX to enter the station. Both companies plan on sending people there in the next couple of years.

The addition is part of a move to hand off space station duties to private companies, allowing NASA to focus its resources on bigger projects like getting to Mars.

Under NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, the agency has worked with the U.S. aerospace industry to develop transportation services to space. It contracted with Boeing and SpaceX in 2014, as The Two-Way has reported.

Williams and Rubins will keep tinkering with the station until about 2 p.m. ET, attaching ethernet and power cables to the port.

Rubins is the 12th woman to do a spacewalk.