Russian and NASA engineers were assessing a coolant leak on Thursday from a Soyuz crew capsule docked with the International Space Station (ISS) that may have been caused by a micrometeorite strike.
Dramatic NASA TV images showed white particles resembling snowflakes streaming out of the rear of the vessel for hours.
The coolant leak forced the last-minute cancellation of a spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts on Wednesday and could potentially impact a return flight to Earth by three crew members.
Russia's space corporation Roscosmos and the US space agency said the leak on the Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft did not pose any danger to the astronauts and cosmonauts aboard the ISS.
"The crew members aboard the space station are safe, and were not in any danger during the leak," NASA said.
It said ground teams were evaluating "potential impacts to the integrity of the Soyuz spacecraft."
"NASA and Roscosmos will continue to work together to determine the next course of action," NASA said.
The TASS news agency quoted Sergei Krikalev, a former cosmonaut who heads the crewed space flight program for Roscosmos, as saying that the leak may have been caused by a tiny meteorite striking Soyuz MS-22.
"The cause of the leak may be a micrometeorite entering the radiator," TASS quoted Krikalev as saying. "Possible consequences are changes in the temperature regime."
"No other changes in the telemetric parameters of either the Soyuz spacecraft or the (ISS) station on the Russian or American segments have been detected," Krikalev said.
- Coolant pressure drop -
NASA later added that the crew on the station "completed normal operations Thursday, including... configuring tools ahead of a planned US spacewalk on Monday."
Soyuz MS-22
Read more on tech.hindustantimes.com