SPACE TRAVEL
Crew of three docks at International Space Station
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Dec 19, 2017


A three-man space crew made up of American and Japanese rookie astronauts and an experienced Russian cosmonaut successfully docked at the International Space Station to begin a six-month mission Tuesday.

NASA TV footage showed the Soyuz MS-07 capsule containing Scott Tingle of NASA, Anton Shkaplerov of Roscosmos and Norishige Kanai of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency dock at the ISS at 0839 GMT following a two-day flight.

A NASA TV commentator hailed the "textbook arrival" of the trio at the orbital lab positioned more than 250 miles above "the boot of Italy" at the time of contact.

In a statement, Roscosmos also confirmed that the Soyuz MS-07 had "successfully docked" at the ISS.

The space travellers who blasted off from Russia's Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in freezing conditions Sunday will now join Russia's Alexander Misurkin and NASA pair Mark Vande Hei and Joe Acaba currently aboard the ISS.

Both Tingle, 52, and Kanai, 40, are in space for the first time but flight commander Shkaplerov, 43, is an experienced hand.

The former Russian military pilot has spent exactly a year in space over two missions and will mark his birthday in orbit for the third time in February next year.

Kanai is the youngest astronaut in the history of the Japanese space agency, and the last of a trio of Japanese astronauts who were certified for travel to the ISS back in 2011.

US Navy captain Tingle is a graduate of Purdue University in Indiana, which also counts space legend Neil Armstrong among its alumni.

While most flights to the ISS now take around six hours, the trio took the more circuitous two-day route due to the lab's position in space at the time of the launch.

Tuesday's docking marks a prompt crew rotation after Sergei Ryazansky of Roscosmos, NASA's Randy Bresnik and European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli returned to Earth Thursday.

NASA stopped its own manned launches to the ISS in 2011 but recently moved to increase the crew complement on the US section of the ISS to four as the Russians cut theirs to two in a cost-saving measure announced last year.

The ISS laboratory, a rare example of American and Russian cooperation, has been orbiting Earth at about 28,000 kilometres per hour since 1998.

cr/su

ISS A/S

SPACE TRAVEL
Two astronauts, cosmonaut return from five-month ISS mission
Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan (AFP) Dec 14, 2017
Two astronauts, from the US and Italy, and a Russian cosmonaut on Thursday landed in Kazakhstan after almost five months on the International Space Station, footage from the Russian space agency showed. American Randy Bresnik, Paolo Nespoli of Italy and Sergey Ryazanskiy of Russia landed on the Kazakh steppe at 2.37pm local time (0837 GMT) in a Soyuz MS-05 spacecraft. Over 139 days in s ... read more

Related Links
Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SPACE TRAVEL
US, S. Korea, Japan start missile-tracking drill, irking China

Japan to host joint missile tracking drill amid N. Korea threat

Israel shoots down rocket fired from Gaza: army

Japan plans long-range missiles amid N. Korea threat: minister

SPACE TRAVEL
Iran supplied ballistic missile to Yemen rebels: US

Raytheon contracted to support anti-ship missile system

Lockheed Martin successfully fired their new anti-ship missile

UN does not confirm Iran link to Yemen missiles: report

SPACE TRAVEL
Dutch police ground drone-fighting eagles

Jet-powered drone tested by BAE Systems

Hensoldt intros new counter-drone system

China says Indian drone 'invaded' its airspace, crashed

SPACE TRAVEL
Military defense market faces new challenges to acquiring SatCom platforms

Harris contracted by Army for radios for security force assistance brigades

Joint Hellas-Sat-4 and SaudiGeoSat-1 satellite ready for environmental tests

Government outsourcing disrupts space as SatComm services commercialised

SPACE TRAVEL
Scientists designed an instrument to identify unexploded artillery shells

Medical issues affect British army readiness

U.S. Army to upgrade weapons on Abrams tanks

Data-collecting device could make for better training of soldiers

SPACE TRAVEL
Raytheon to support inventory management for Army

Department of Defense seeks to speed up acquisition process

EU launches defence pact with submarine drones

Dutch want arms dealer's extradition after S.Africa arrest

SPACE TRAVEL
China dismisses 'hype' over S. China Sea military buildup

EU launches defence pact it calls 'bad news for enemies'

Trump sends mixed message with 'America First' security strategy

Japan eyes $46bn defence budget to counter N. Korea: report

SPACE TRAVEL
New nanowires are just a few atoms thick

Physicists explain metallic conductivity of thin carbon nanotube films

Ceria nanoparticles: It is the surface that matters

Semiconducting carbon nanotubes can reduce noise in interconnects