The crew of the International Space Station was not in danger while a small amount of smoke came from a vent Tuesday in a service module, NASA said in a news release. The six-person crew called in the smoke report Tuesday about 2:40 p.m. ET. Russian flight controllers and the crew pinpointed the most likely source of the smoke as a heater and the crew turned it off. Crew members set up a fan and used a filter to air out the area. Steve Swanson, commander of Expedition 40, said the smoke quickly subsided. The Russian-made Zvezda service module is 43 feet long and 13½ feet in diameter. It is the site of living quarters and the galley, and the issue arose in a water reclamation unit. SpaceX unveils new spacecraft to take astronauts to space station, back to Earth