Astronauts complete prep for new ISS solar array on 1st NASA spacewalk in 10 months


Two NASA astronauts prepared the International Space Station (ISS) for the addition of a new solar array on the first U.S. spacewalk in almost a year.

Expedition 74 crewmates Jessica Meir and Chris Williams ventured outside of the space station’s Quest airlock at 8:52 a.m. EDT (1252 GMT) on Wednesday (March 18) to install a mount for an advanced power-producing solar panel. The pair worked on the left (or port) side of the space station’s backbone truss, where they first assembled and then attached the bracket structure that will support an ISS Roll-Out Array (iROSA), to be installed on a future spacewalk.

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a view from a spacesuit helmet-mounted camera showing the gears for a space station's rotating solar arrays

The view from NASA astronaut Chris Williams’ spacesuit helmet-mounted camera shows the gears for one of the International Space Station’s rotating solar array wings during a spacewalk on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Image credit: NASA)

The space station’s original solar arrays have degraded, having exceeded their 15-year service life. When all of them are in place, the new iROSAs will increase the orbiting lab’s electricity supply by 20% to 30%.



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