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Italian prepares for a second ride up to the Space Station



 
 
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Old March 25th 05, 02:10 PM
Jacques van Oene
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Default Italian prepares for a second ride up to the Space Station

Italian prepares for a second ride up to the Space Station

24 March 2005

A distress beacon flashes over the snow-covered surroundings. Someone is
apparently being evacuated from an improvised shelter. The scene looks
strange, somewhat theatrical. But it's not a film studio.

It is miles from anywhere and the snow is Russian. The makeshift tent is in
fact a parachute. For all those involved, it is a routine exercise:
retrieving a cosmonaut who has just returned from space.
Roberto Vittori has been through this kind of survival training several
times. The former Italian Airforce fighter pilot, now an ESA astronaut,
recognises the thoroughness of the training given by the Russian instructors
at Moscow's Star City where he was interviewed by EuroNews.


"The training is a particularly intense period. We are separated from our
families, we have to concentrate a lot and we really must be highly
motivated."
All those following courses at Star City are imbued by the history of the
place which has seen so many legendary Russian cosmonauts. Today many
nationalities are present, all preparing for manned flights to the ISS.
Roberto Vittori already knows the ropes. In April 2002, as part of the Marco
Polo mission, he spent 10 days aboard the Space Station. In a few weeks
time, he will be the first European to pay a second visit to the ISS.


"Preparation for an astronaut begins at Star City eight months before a
mission. In fact I arrived here in August 2004 for my Eneide mission which
will blast off from Baïkonur on 15 April. The training involves class
studies on space technology and techniques, sessions in the simulators and
preparing physically and mentally for the mission ahead."

The Eneide mission will be the tenth time a Soyuz launcher sends astronauts
to the Space Station. Vittori will be the flight engineer aboard the Soyuz
capsule. With him will be Expedition-11, the station's new occupants for the
next six months: veteran Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev and American
astronaut and scientist John Phillips. Vittori will be returning with the
Expedition-10 crew Leroy Chiao and Salizhan Sharipov.
Roberto Vittori recalls the sensations that he is soon to experience for the
second time. "The lift-off is an extremely strong moment. The minutes
leading up to engines ignition are very intense. After having completed the
pre-launch routines, there is slight apprehension as we wait. Then one hears
the flight controller's final count... "3,2,1". The engines start and the
capsule starts to vibrate."


"The launch phase passes very quickly. It is a moment of controlled stress,
there is a lot to do and one must focus all one's concentration on the tasks
to be accomplished."
"Then, suddenly, one is caught by surprise when the engines shut down and
one finds oneself in weightlessness. Only then can one review events and
realise that we are 200 kilometres above the Earth, having passed from zero
to 27,000 km/h in only nine minutes."
"Realising what one has just achieved, there's no feeling of fear, just
enormous respect for modern technology which has made it all possible."


Roberto Vittori will once again experience this on 15 April. The ten-day
stay aboard the International Space Station will be packed with a programme
of experiments - in fact Europeans have become the most important science
users of the ISS.
The Italian astronaut will also be preparing the ground for longer duration
missions, six months, which will once again be made possible when the
Shuttle is back in service. Meanwhile Vittori and all the ISS partners will
be thanking the venerable and trustworthy Soyuz launcher system.


--
--------------

Jacques :-)

www.spacepatches.info


 




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