Final Spacewalk for STS-128
Here is a video of the final spacewalk of the STS-128 mission. The 7 hour and 1 minute spacewalk is condensed into this 14 minutes video. There is some spectacular video here!
Zeb Scoville, the STS-128 Lead Spacewalk Officer, mentioned during the Sept. 6, Mission Status Briefing that: 20 hours and 15 minutes of EVA time occurred this mission and a total ISS assembly time of 830 hours and 50 minutes. The way it was worded was a bit strange but I assume that is EVA time.
Source: NASA

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[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] De ruimtewandeling werd uitgevoerd door astronauten Danny Olivas en Christer Fuglesang. De bedoeling is dat de Discovery vrijdagnacht 01.09 uur Nederlandse tijd weer terugkeert op Aarde. Bron: Tom’s Astroblog. [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]
[...] Early in the video, that first helmet cam glimpse of Earth, so many, many miles below, is completely and utterly breathtaking. Trivia: They were passing over South America at the time. [YouTube via Tom's Astronomy Blog] [...]