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N° 18-2006 - Paris, 17 June 2006
First ESA long-duration mission onboard the ISS given 1 July start With NASA's announcement today of the launch of Space Shuttle Discovery on 1 July, ESA astronaut Thomas Reiter, from Germany, is set to spend six to seven months in space as a member of the permanent crew of the International Space Station. Discovery is now scheduled to lift off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida at 21:48 CEST (19:48 GMT). Docking with the ISS is scheduled for the third day of the mission. Once onboard the ISS, Thomas Reiter will join the current permanent crew, working alongside Russian commander Pavel Vinogradov and NASA flight engineer Jeffrey Williams. An ESA astronaut since 1992, Reiter already has experience of long-duration spaceflight, having spent 179 days onboard the Russian space station Mir in 1995/1996 on ESA's EuroMir 95 mission. With this new mission dubbed "Astrolab", ESA will inaugurate the long-term presence of European astronauts onboard the ISS. The mission also marks the return to a three-member permanent crew operating the orbital facility. This larger crew will mean that more time can be devoted to science experiments. Also marking the Shuttle's eventual return to flight, this mission will in addition be a go-ahead signal for the resumption of ISS assembly, with the upcoming launches of European-built Nodes 2 and 3 and ESA's own Columbus laboratory. Already flying with Reiter on the Astrolab mission will be some key ESA equipment to be integrated on the Station, including the first Minus-Eighty degree Laboratory Freezer for the ISS (MELFI), a facility developed for long-term conservation of biological samples and experiment results. This will also be the first time that a European control centre is used for a long-duration human spaceflight mission on board the ISS, paving the way for an increased ESA presence onboard the international facility with the arrival of the Columbus laboratory. The Columbus Control Centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, will be the hub of European activity during the Astrolab mission. For the launch of this milestone mission, ESA is organising a live video event, broadcast to its Headquarters and establishments. ESA experts will be on hand for interviews. ESA TV will provide extensive coverage of the mission including the final preparations, with transmissions as follows: 19 June STS-121 B-roll with best images released so far by NASA 20 June Columbus laboratory 27 June Astrolab mission video news release 27 June (live) Arrival of STS-121 in Florida for launch 29 June (live) Pre-launch news conference from Kennedy Space Center 1 July (live) Launch day coverage, from 12:00 GMT - 14:00 GMT (not continuous) 2 July (live) Mission status briefing, with first quick look at Shuttle ascent images 3 July (live) Docking with ISS, STS-121 crew ingress 6 July (live) Joint crew news conference 13 July (live) Landing at Kennedy Space Center In addition, all NASA-TV flight day highlights from the preceding day in orbit will be rebroadcast at 04:00 GMT daily. Satellite details for these and the exact times for the above transmissions will be posted on http://television.esa.int around three to five days prior to the transmission concerned (please note that tape copies of live events cannot be made available). The launch and mission can be followed on the web at : www.esa.int/astrolab. Media representatives wishing to follow the event at one of the ESA establishments listed below are requested to fill in the attached registration form and fax it back to the location of their choice. For further information, please contact : ESA Media Relations Division Tel: +33(0)1.53.69.7155 Fax: +33(0)1.53.69.7690 -- -------------- Jacques :-) www.spacepatches.nl |
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Jacques van Oene wrote:
The mission also marks the return to a three-member permanent crew operating the orbital facility. Ok, if Discovery launches with problems similar to its previous flight, with NASA announcing a similar grounding, Will Reiter stay on station, with the next crews back to only 2, or would Reiter return on Discovery leaving the ISS with 2 crewmembers ? What is the status on the role of the shuttle with respect to crew exchanges ? Will Soyuz be responsible for crew exchanges for 2 crewmembers with shuttle responsible for the 3rd crewmember ? Or will Soyuz be responsible for all crewmmeber exchanges ? (depriving Russia of the potential to sell a 3rd seat). |
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John Doe wrote in :
What is the status on the role of the shuttle with respect to crew exchanges ? Will Soyuz be responsible for crew exchanges for 2 crewmembers with shuttle responsible for the 3rd crewmember ? Or will Soyuz be responsible for all crewmmeber exchanges ? (depriving Russia of the potential to sell a 3rd seat). The former. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
exchanges ? Will Soyuz be responsible for crew exchanges for 2 crewmembers with shuttle responsible for the 3rd crewmember ? The former. So, should they discover some "flaws" similar to Discovery's previous flight which leads to an "instant" grounding once Discovery is back to earth, this means that the 3rd crewmember doesn't stay on the ISS ? Or would he stay no matter what, with backup arrangements to bring him back on a Soyuz ? |
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John Doe wrote in :
"Jorge R. Frank" wrote: exchanges ? Will Soyuz be responsible for crew exchanges for 2 crewmembers with shuttle responsible for the 3rd crewmember ? The former. So, should they discover some "flaws" similar to Discovery's previous flight which leads to an "instant" grounding once Discovery is back to earth, this means that the 3rd crewmember doesn't stay on the ISS ? Or would he stay no matter what, with backup arrangements to bring him back on a Soyuz ? Mr. Mezei, you know I snipped that question the last time you asked, and there's a good reason for that. The reason is that I don't know the answer. And that's not going to change just because you keep asking it. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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A safety concious organization when faced with a uncertain / grim
supply situation would return the exrta person. nasa and its failed safety culture might decide to leave some extra astronauts on station long term. I am not joking, if safe return is unceratain and with no easy way back, and obviously a rescue shuttle a bad idea nasa might have 2 astronauts attempt a shuttle return while leaving the remaining 5 at station. of the 7 stuck at station 3 would return by soyuz at station the remaining 4 awaiting futher soyuz ferry craft........ nasa is setting up some interesting movie scripts the sad thing is many end with people dead.... in any case nasa will again be center stage, but for all the wrong reasons........ |
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