Jacques van Oene
April 20th 05, 12:17 PM
Roberto Vittori's diary from space: Arrival at the Station
20 April 2005
It has been a long second day in the Soyuz. The space in the Habitation
Module is very very limited. In this narrow place we have to do everything:
eat, sleep, rest, wash, etc. One of the biggest challenges has been the time
shift we have to face. In fact, launch, insertion into orbit, and also
approach and docking are all performed at night.
Sergei, having already flown five times, immediately feels at home. For John
and I, although we both have one previous spaceflight experience, the
adaptation is a little slower.
On Saturday night we start procedures to approach the Station. We dress
again in our Sokol suits and return to the Command Module.
All went according to plan, but it was very long and tiring. It is very
tense when you are so close to the Station. At the moment of docking, the
two spacecraft travel at a speed of about 27.000 km/hour, approximately 8
km/sec. At that speed the two spaceships have to join with a relative
velocity of 0.15 m/sec or less. Difficult even for us to imagine.
Docking went without any problems. After performing the necessary checks, we
open the hatch. We are on board the International Space Station.
--
--------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info
20 April 2005
It has been a long second day in the Soyuz. The space in the Habitation
Module is very very limited. In this narrow place we have to do everything:
eat, sleep, rest, wash, etc. One of the biggest challenges has been the time
shift we have to face. In fact, launch, insertion into orbit, and also
approach and docking are all performed at night.
Sergei, having already flown five times, immediately feels at home. For John
and I, although we both have one previous spaceflight experience, the
adaptation is a little slower.
On Saturday night we start procedures to approach the Station. We dress
again in our Sokol suits and return to the Command Module.
All went according to plan, but it was very long and tiring. It is very
tense when you are so close to the Station. At the moment of docking, the
two spacecraft travel at a speed of about 27.000 km/hour, approximately 8
km/sec. At that speed the two spaceships have to join with a relative
velocity of 0.15 m/sec or less. Difficult even for us to imagine.
Docking went without any problems. After performing the necessary checks, we
open the hatch. We are on board the International Space Station.
--
--------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info