The International Space Station suffered a small leak of ammonia used to cool its power system, but there was no danger to the crew, NASA said. The US space agency said the crew had spotted small white flakes floating away from an area outside the craft before reporting the incident to Mission Control in Houston. NASA said in a bulletin on its website that while the rate of ammonia leaking from the station's truss structure had increased, the "station continues to operate normally otherwise and the crew is in no danger." "Ammonia is used to cool the station's power channels that provide electricity to station systems," NASA said, revealing that the leak was coming from the same general area it did in a previous episode last year. "This ammonia loop is the same one that spacewalkers attempted to troubleshoot a leak on during a spacewalk on Nov. 1, 2012," the statement said. "It is not yet known whether this increased ammonia flow is from the same leak, which at the time, was not visible." The ISS is currently crewed by six staff, under the command of Canadian Chris Hadfield.
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