mardi 15 mars 2011

Paolo Nespoli’s MagISStra mission at midway point












ESA - MagISStra Mission patch.

15 March 2011

ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli is now half way into his six-month mission on the International Space Station. Monday’s handover of command heralds the departure of three crewmembers and the arrival of a new trio in the coming weeks.

Expedition 26 Commander Scott Kelly handed over command of the Station to cosmonaut Dmitry Kondratyev during a ceremony yesterday evening.

ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli (top) and Russian cosmonaut Alexander Kaleri, both Expedition 26 flight engineers

Kelly, Soyuz commander Alexander Kaleri and Russian flight engineer Oleg Skripochka will close the hatch and depart in their Soyuz TMA-01M spacecraft at 06:00 CET on Wednesday, 16 March.

The three Expedition 26 astronauts aim to land in northern Kazakhstan near the town of Arkalyk at 08:48 CET later that day.

The Expedition 27 crew of Paolo, new commander Dmitry Kondratyev and astronaut Cady Coleman will welcome fresh crewmembers in early April: Russian cosmonauts Alexander Samokutyaev and Andrey Borisenko, and NASA flight engineer Ron Garan.

Expedition 28

Russia’s Roscosmos space agency announced today that the launch of the new trio has been delayed from 30 March owing to technical checks required on their Soyuz TMA-21 spacecraft.

They will remain aboard the Station for about six months as Expedition 28.

Busy beginning for 2011

The last two months have been historic for the Space Station. The Space Shuttles are making their last visits and there have never been so many craft docked with the orbital complex.

Discovery as seen from ISS

Japan’s HTV-2 freighter began the sequence in January, before Russia’s Progress M-09M docked on 20 January. ESA’s ATV-2 roared into space atop an Ariane 5 on 16 February, docking majestically eight days later.

The latest visitor was Shuttle Discovery, leaving behind the European-built Leonardo module as a multipurpose storeroom.

The next Shuttle, targeted for launch on 19 April, will deliver the massive Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer. Also aboard is another Italian astronaut, ESA’s Roberto Vittori.

Paolo’s three months in space

Paolo Nespoli has now been in space for 89 days – midway through his MagISStra mission.

His duties include ISS flight engineer, conducting more than 30 scientific experiments and technology demonstrations, performing educational activities, participating in public relations events – and using much of his free time photographing Earth and tweeting.

Paolo Nespoli works with LMM

His Twitter account http://twitter.com/astro_paolo will soon reach 30 000 followers. His photostream is at http://www.flickr.com/photos/magisstra.

Paolo’s Expedition 27 will return to Earth at the end of May and Expedition 29 (Sergei Volkov, Mike Fossum and Satoshi Furukawa) will complete the crew in early June.

After Paolo and Roberto, the next European on the Station will be ESA’s Dutch astronaut André Kuipers in December.

Related link:

ISS Expedition 26 (NASA): http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition26/index.html

See the ISS: http://www.esa.int/esaHS/ESA0I6KE43D_iss_0.html

Images, Text, Credits: ESA / NASA.

Best regards, Orbiter.ch