Astronauts Observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day in Space

Earth from the ISS for World Photography Day
NASA astronaut Scott Kelly tweeted this photo of the Earth taken on the International Space Station, August 19, 2015.
Credit: Scott Kelly (via Twitter as ‏@StationCDRKelly)

Like their cohort on the ground, astronauts aboard the U.S. segment of the International Space Station will take a day off today (Jan. 18) to celebrate the life of Martin Luther King Jr.

NASA astronauts Scott Kelly and Tim Kopra and European Space Agency astronaut Tim Peake, the first British astronaut to visit the International Space Station, will be off-duty today, NASA spokesman Dan Huot told Space.com.

The three cosmonauts aboard the station — Mikhail Kornienko, Sergey Volkov and Yuri Malenchenko — have a full day of tasks scheduled.

NASA itself is also paying tribute to King. On Friday (Jan. 15), NASA posted a video “celebrat[ing] Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service”:

Last year, and in 2014, NASA tweeted a photograph of King’s hometown, Atlanta, as seen from the space station.

Kopra and Peake finished a spacewalk Friday — Peake’s first — and repaired one of the space station’s eight power channels before returning early because of a water bubble in Kopra’s helmet .

The main upcoming task on their schedule, Huot said, is Kelly’s test run for the SPHERES Zero Robotics Program, which let high school students write algorithms for three free-flying robotic satellites operated from the space station. The winning research designs are used to run the actual satellites in space.

Kopra, Peake and Malenchenko arrived at the space station in December to join Kelly and Kornienko, who are several weeks away from the end of their yearlong mission in space, as well as Volkov.

Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains . Follow us @Spacedotcom , Facebook  and Google+ . Original article on Space.com .

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