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Russian-US crew launches on fast
track to the space station
MOSCOW
(AP) — A trio of space travelers launched successfully to the International
Space Station, for the first time using a fast-track maneuver to reach the
orbiting outpost in just three hours.
NASA’s
Kate Rubins along with Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov of the Russian
space agency Roscosmos lifted off as scheduled Wednesday morning from the
Russia-leased Baikonur space launch facility in Kazakhstan for a six-month stint
on the station.
For the
first time, they tried a two-orbit approach and docked with the space station in
just a little over three hours after lift-off. Previously it took twice as long
for crews to reach the station.
They
will join the station’s NASA commander, Chris Cassidy, and Roscosmos cosmonauts
Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner, who have been aboard the complex since April
and are scheduled to return to Earth in a week.
Speaking during Tuesday’s pre-launch news conference
at Baikonur, Rubins emphasized that the crew spent weeks in quarantine at the
Star City training facility outside Moscow and then on Baikonur to avoid any
threat from the coronavirus.
“We
spent two weeks at Star City and then 17 days at Baikonur in a very strict
quarantine,” Rubins said. “During all communications with crew members, we were
wearing masks. We made PCR tests twice and we also made three times antigen fast
tests.”
She
said she was looking forward to scientific experiments planned for the
mission.
“We’re
planning to try some really interesting things like bio-printing tissues and
growing cells in space and, of course, continuing our work on sequencing DNA,”
Rubins said.
Ryzhikov, who will be the station’s skipper, said the
crew will try to pinpoint the exact location of a leak at a station’s Russian
section that has slowly leaked oxygen. The small leak hasn’t posed any immediate
danger to the crew.
“We
will take with us additional equipment which will allow us to detect the place
of this leak more precisely,” he told reporters. “We will also take with us
additional improved hermetic material which will allow to fix the
leak.”
In
November, Rubins, Ryzhikov and Kud-Sverchkov are set to greet NASA’s SpaceX
first operational Crew Dragon mission, bringing NASA astronauts Mike Hopkins,
Victor Glover and Shannon Walker, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
astronaut Soichi Noguchi to the space station aboard the Crew Dragon vehicle. It
follows a successful Demo-2 mission earlier this year.
The
Crew Dragon mission was pushed back from Oct. 31 into November, and no new date
has been set yet. The delay is intended to give SpaceX more time to conduct
tests and review data from an aborted Falcon 9 launch earlier this month.
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