<p>ISS crew members Dmitry Kondratyev and Oleg Skripotchka were to spend some six hours in work to install sensors to register earthquakes and lightning strikes on earth.<br /><br />Also, the two will be dismantling equipment from an experiment on the Russian module Svesda, officials at the space mission control centre outside Moscow said, according to Interfax.<br /><br />Cameras installed in the cosmonauts' helmets will provide direct TV transmission as they carry out their work.<br /><br />It is the second space walk by Russian cosmonauts in less than a month. On Jan 21, in a five-hour, 23-minute operation, they installed a camera to record docking manoeuvres of the Soyus capsule with the ISS.<br /><br />Besides the two cosmonauts, the current ISS crew includes Alexander Kaleri of Russia, US astronauts Scott Kelly and Catherine Coleman, and Paolo Nespoli of Italy.</p>
<p>ISS crew members Dmitry Kondratyev and Oleg Skripotchka were to spend some six hours in work to install sensors to register earthquakes and lightning strikes on earth.<br /><br />Also, the two will be dismantling equipment from an experiment on the Russian module Svesda, officials at the space mission control centre outside Moscow said, according to Interfax.<br /><br />Cameras installed in the cosmonauts' helmets will provide direct TV transmission as they carry out their work.<br /><br />It is the second space walk by Russian cosmonauts in less than a month. On Jan 21, in a five-hour, 23-minute operation, they installed a camera to record docking manoeuvres of the Soyus capsule with the ISS.<br /><br />Besides the two cosmonauts, the current ISS crew includes Alexander Kaleri of Russia, US astronauts Scott Kelly and Catherine Coleman, and Paolo Nespoli of Italy.</p>