Archive for person crew

Russian, US crew safely dock with space station


Wed Nov 16, 2011 6:14am EST

* First manned mission since U.S. shuttle programme retired

* Launch was delayed from September over safety fears

* Russia seeks to restore confidence in space programme

MOSCOW, Nov 16 (Reuters) – Three astronauts in
Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft safely docked with the International
Space Station on Wednesday, to the relief of agencies who had
feared they might have to leave the orbiting base empty for the
first time in a decade.

Moscow hopes the smooth flight — the first since NASA
retired its space shuttles this summer — will restore faith in
its space programme after the crash of a freight ship and a
series of botched launches.

The NASA shutdown means Russian spaceships are the only way
to ferry goods and crews to the $100-billion space station,
backed by 16 nations.

Ground support teams had scrambled to draw up plans to leave
the orbital station unmanned should the Soyuz flight have
problems.

The Soyuz TMA-22 crew linked up minutes ahead of schedule at
0524 GMT with the space station suspended 248 miles (399km)
above the Pacific Ocean after a cramped, two-day journey from
Russia’s Baikonur launch pad in Kazakhstan.

Veteran NASA astronaut Daniel Burbank, 50, is taking over
command of the station, while cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov, 39,
and Anatoly Ivanishin, 42, made their maiden space voyage.

“We are doing great, there were no problems whatsoever. We
are now flying over Australia. The view is breathtaking,”
Shkaplerov said in a video link with his family at Mission
Control in Moscow.

NASA TV showed station crew members Mike Fossum of NASA,
Japan’s Satoshi Furukawa and Russia’s Sergei Volkov embracing
the new arrivals as they floated, grinning through the hatch.

The mission has been delayed since September over safety
fears sparked when an unmanned Russian Progress craft broke up
in the atmosphere in August.

Wednesday’s docking briefly returns a full, six-person crew
to orbit before the current residents return to Earth later this
month. The station will only regain full occupancy with the
planned launch of a new crew in late December.

Shkaplerov’s five-year-old daughter, Irina, asked about a
small stuffed bird from the mobile app Angry Birds that she had
given him for the trip. The stuffed toy now serves as the crew’s
mascot and zero gravity indicator.

“Your bird is with me. It made it safely to the station. I
will show it to you soon,” Shkaplerov reassured her.

A string of space failures have marred celebrations marking
this year’s 50th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin’s pioneering orbit.
The problems have also pointed to deeper troubles with Russia’s
space industry.

Moscow hopes the by-the-book docking will begin to restore
its reputation after more trouble last week when a launch touted
as post-Soviet Russia’s interplanetary debut went awry.

Russia is likely to have lost the $165-million Phobos-Grunt
probe, which is stuck in orbit and may drop to Earth after it
failed to set a course toward Mars’ moon last Wednesday.

Botched launches have also lost Russia a high-tech military
orbiter, a costly telecommunication satellite and set back plans
for a global navigation system to rival the U.S. navigation
system GPS.

While NASA suffered the tragic loss of crews on its Columbia
and Challenger shuttles in 2003 and 1986, Russia’s last troubles
with manned flights date back to the Soyuz-11 mission in 1971,
when three cosmonauts died on re-entry.

(Writing by Alissa de Carbonnel; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/16/russia-space-idUSL5E7MG1EX20111116

Tags: , , <BR/>

Volunteer Astronauts ‘Return’ Home This Week After Mock Mars Mission

After spending nearly a year-and-a-half isolated from the rest of the world on a simulated mission to Mars, six volunteer astronauts are set to “return” home to Earth this week.

The hatch of the spacecraft, which is really an isolation facility housed at the Russian Institute for Biomedical Problems in Moscow, will be opened on Nov. 4 for the first time since June 2010, when the six-person crew embarked on their mock 520-day journey to the Red Planet and back.

Tags: , , , , , , <BR/>

Hurricane forces NASA to halt undersea ‘asteroid’ mission

NASA recalled the astronaut crew of a mock asteroid mission on the ocean floor Wednesday because of growing concerns about Hurricane Rina, which is threatening to make landfall along Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula.

Since Oct. 20, a six-person crew of astronauts and scientists has been living at the Aquarius Underwater Laboratory, which sits 60 feet (18 meters) below the Atlantic Ocean, about 3 1/2 miles off the shore of Key Largo, Fla.. But Hurricane Rina forced the crew to resurface about a week earlier than planned due to safety concerns from the strengthening storm.

“(Mission controllers) were watching the weather forecast yesterday and were 90 percent sure that they were going to have go to ahead and end the mission,” NASA spokesperson Brandi Dean told Space.com. “If the forecast had changed dramatically, they could have stayed down, but that didn’t happen.”

NASA has also released a video of Hurricane Rina from space as seen by astronauts living on the International Space Station.

The asteroid simulation was the 15th expedition of NASA’s Extreme Environment Mission Operations, or NEEMO, and was the first to test ways to anchor to an asteroid, explore its surface, and perform science experiments on the space rock.

The start of the NEEMO 15 mission had already been delayed because of what was then a tropical storm nearby. To ensure the crew’s safety, the 13-day mission was cut short today at roughly the halfway mark.

“Crew decompressed overnight and will return to surface shortly. Hurricane Rina just a little too close for comfort,” NEEMO 15 mission controllers said via Twitter early this morning.

Yesterday, NASA astronaut Mike Fossum, commander of the International Space Station, captured views of the menacing Hurricane Rina from aboard the orbiting complex. The video footage was captured at 2:39 p.m. EDT Tuesday as the space station flew 248 miles (399 kilometers) over the Caribbean Sea, east of Belize.

The NEEMO 15 “aquanaut” crew underwent a 15-hour decompression process overnight last night and returned to the surface shortly after 9:30 a.m. EDT this morning.

“Crew sad to leave early, but feel we got a lot of objectives accomplished,” NEEMO 15 crew member David Saint-Jacques said via Twitter this morning. “Overnight decompression fine. See you at surface.”

NASA does not intend to resume the NEEMO 15 expedition at a later time, Dean said, but the crew members were able to accomplish many of the mission’s goals while they were submerged.



NASA

“They were able to get a lot of good information,” she said. “Obviously we would have liked to have gotten more, but they have to stay safe there.”

The NEEMO 15 crew is made up of Saint-Jacques, NASA astronaut Shannon Walker, who was commander of the expedition, Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi, planetary scientist Steve Squyres and two veteran divers, James Talacek and Nate Bender of the University of North Carolina, Wilmington.

The aquanauts were testing various concepts of how to anchor to an asteroid, travel around on its surface and perform science experiments on a mock asteroid landscape that was assembled on the ocean floor. The crew completed six extravehicular activities outside the Aquarius habitat and collected a wealth of scientific data in the process, Dean said.

Yesterday, the crew members also participated in a series of behavioral science projects that included simulating communication delays with Mission Control that astronauts would encounter on a real-life mission to an asteroid.


    1. Image: Tandem


      JP Aerospace


      Tandem airship hits high frontier


      Science editor Alan Boyle’s Weblog: An unmanned airship rose to nearly 100,000 feet over the weekend — marking the latest milestone for a volunteer group that’s aiming to send balloon-borne payloads into space.


    2. German satellite crashed over Bay of Bengal


    3. Public again may tour NASA’s huge VAB


    4. 2,000-year-old supernova mystery solved

The results of the NEEMO 15 mission will help NASA plan for a future trip to an asteroid. As part of NASA’s exploration goals, the agency is aiming to send humans to an asteroid by the year 2025.

The NEEMO mission is a joint venture between NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which owns the Aquarius laboratory, and the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, which operates the underwater facility.

You can follow Space.com staff writer Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

© 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Article source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45050010/ns/technology_and_science-space/

Tags: , , , <BR/>

Russian space chief says crash ‘isolated’ glitch


MOSCOW |
Fri Oct 7, 2011 12:17pm EDT

MOSCOW Oct 7 (Reuters) – Russia’s space agency chief told
lawmakers on Friday that safety checks showed a rocket failure
that led to the crash of an unmanned cargo craft was an isolated
problem but said it had highlighted deeper concerns.

With the NASA space shuttles retired this year, the failed
launch last month exposed the vulnerability of having only one
way for crews to fly and raised fears about the future of the
International Space Station.

Roskomos head Vladimir Popovkin said an inspection of
rockets similar to the one that caused the crash of the Progress
cargo ship had found no production faults, opening the way for
launches to be renewed to the space station.

An earlier investigation blamed a fuel pipe blockage.

“We tested all the engines so we can say that the clogged
pipe that brought down the Progress is an isolated incident,”
Popovkin said in a televised address to parliament.

He said a crowded launch schedule — including a Progress
supply flight on Oct. 30 and crewed mission on Nov. 14 — would
bring the space station back to full operation by Dec. 21.

Delays after the Progress crash left a three-person crew
aboard the station, a $100-billion project of 16 nations that
orbits about 225 miles (360 km) above the Earth.

Popovkin said a series of botched launches in recent months
showed the need to create an independent agency to run quality
controls at the Russian-leased Baikonur launchpad in Kazakhstan.

“I honestly do not think it should be seen as a major
achievement for us that we are the only ones fully supporting
(flights to) the International Space Station,” he said.

“While other countries are working on new (spacecraft) we
are forced to focus on the production of well-reputed but
comparatively old spacecrafts Soyuz and Progress.”

Despite the fact that Russia fields 40 percent of the
world’s space launches, he said it only held 3 percent of the
$267-billion-dollar global space industry market this year.

NASA unveiled plans last month to redirect funds toward
building a deep-space rocket to carry astronauts to the Moon,
Mars and other destinations beyond.

NASA projects its first test flights in 2017.

Popovkin dismissed ambitions to fly cosmonauts to Mars,
saying Russia would make exploration of the Moon its priority.

“The prospect of flights to asteroids and Mars is far off
and their realisation depends not only on the economic
development of the country but technological progress.”

Citing a lack of financing, the space agency chief also said
Russia would halt the production of Rus-M carrier rockets, part
of an ambitious plan to launch new-generation spacecraft from
2015 at the Vostochny launchpad Russia aims to build in the Far
East.

“We have come to the conclusion that we do not need a new
rocket, we can continue using those we already have,” Popovkin
said.

(Reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel)

Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/07/russia-space-idUSL5E7L728620111007

Tags: , , , , <BR/>

Mission extended for three space station residents



Mission extended for three space station residents
BY STEPHEN CLARK
SPACEFLIGHT NOW

Posted: September 1, 2011

Bookmark and Share

Two Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut living aboard the International Space Station are scheduled to return to Earth on Sept. 16, leaving the outpost with a three-person crew until Russia can resume crewed launches of the grounded Soyuz rocket.


NASA astronaut Ron Garan, Russian cosmonaut Alexander Samokutyaev and space station commander Andrey Borisenko. Credit: NASA
 

Space station commander Andrey Borisenko, Russian cosmonaut Alexander Samokutyaev and NASA flight engineer Ronald Garan will crawl into their Soyuz TMA-21 capsule Sept. 15, undock from the complex and parachute back to Earth to a landing zone in Kazakhstan.

Touchdown is expected early Sept. 16, U.S. Eastern time, or in the mid-morning hours at the Kazakhstan landing site.

Borisenko, Samokutyaev and Garan will wrap up approximately 165 days in orbit since launching April 4. The trio reached the space station two days after liftoff.

Space station managers delayed the Expedition 28 crew’s return from Sept. 8 in the wake of the launch failure of a Soyuz rocket last week with an unpiloted Progress resupply ship bound for the orbiting lab. The mission extension will allow the space station to continue functioning with a full six-person crew an extra week, freeing up more time for scientific research.

Russian engineers traced the Aug. 24 failure to an anomaly in the Soyuz rocket’s third stage RD-0110 engine.

The Progress mission used a Soyuz-U rocket, which employs the same third stage as the Soyuz-FG rocket used launch manned spacecraft. Officials say the Soyuz rocket won’t launch another crew until Russia completes its investigation, implements corrective actions and conducts test flights of the rocket with unmanned payloads.

Astronaut Michael Fossum, Russian flight engineer Sergei Volkov and Japanese flier Satoshi Furukawa will remain aboard the space station until mid-November.

Russia plans to launch the next three-person crew on a Soyuz rocket before Fossum’s crew returns to Earth, assuming officials finish their investigation and a pair of unmanned launches go as planned.

If the Soyuz rocket is unable to ferry another crew into space by mid-November, NASA says the space station will probably be temporarily abandoned until the next set of astronauts arrive.

Article source: http://www.spaceflightnow.com/station/exp28/110901landing/

Tags: , , <BR/>