Space Station Ammonia Leak Scare Likely a False Alarm, NASA Says

Crewmembers were forced to evacuate the U.S. segment of the International Space Station on Jan. 14, 2015 due to a possible ammonia leak.

A potentially scary ammonia leak on the International Space Station triggered an evacuation of astronauts and cosmonauts to the Russian side of the orbiting outpost early Wednesday (Jan. 14), but NASA flight controllers now think it was likely a false alarm.

Space agency officials now think that the alarm, which sounded at about 4 a.m. EST (0900 GMT) Wednesday, may have been caused by a malfunctioning piece of equipment, and not a leak of the toxic gas into the U.S. side of the orbiting outpost (which includes the European, Japanese and U.S. modules). NASA astronauts Terry Virts, Barry "Butch" Wilmore and European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti are all safe on the Russian side of the station and have an impromptu day off due to the evacuation.

"At this point, the team does not believe we leaked ammonia," Mike Suffredini, the manager of NASA's International Space Station program office, said during a live update on NASA TV today. "What we are dealing with is this failure of probably a card inside of one of our multiplexor-demultiplexors. It's just a computer that sends telemetry down [to Earth] and sends commands back up [to the space station.]" [Space Station's Cooling System Explained (Infographic)]

The three astronauts and their fellow crewmembers, Russian cosmonauts Elena Serova, Alexander Samokutyaev and Anton Shkaplerov, have enough food to last them for a while on the Russian side of the station, officials have said. Suffredini hopes that Wilmore, Cristoforetti and Virts should be able to get back into the U.S. side by tonight.

"Hey everybody, thanks for your concern," Cristoforetti wrote on Twitter today. "We're all safe & doing well in the Russian segment."

Mission Controllers are still running tests to confirm that a leak didn't trigger the alarm. Ground controllers were worried that ammonia was leaking into a water loop used as part of a system to control the temperature on the International Space Station. Suffredini added that they then saw a pressure increase in the cabin, which also could have indicated an ammonia leak.

"There's a possibility that this is a combination of sensor problems, [computer] partial failures, and thermal effects all thrown together in the exact wrong way to make it look like this was your classic ammonia leak," astronaut James Kelly radioed to Wilmore from Houston earlier in the day.

Suffredini doesn't expect that any science will be lost because of the evacuation. Officials have started powering on equipment initially turned off when the possible leak was detected, making sure that power is running to various experiments on the U.S. side of the station.

Research initially scheduled for today — including a feeding for fruit flies on the outpost — can likely be rescheduled without much problem, Suffredini added.

Astronauts have evacuated the United States side of the International Space Station two times during false alarms that could have indicated a leak, NASA spokesman Rob Navias told Space.com via email. Station crewmembers have not had to evacuate due to a real leaks before.

Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramer. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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