Cape Breton Post

Canadian astronaut could fly Dec. 3

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Russian space officials said Wednesday that they hope to resume sending crews to the Internatio­nal Space Station in early December, potentiall­y clearing the way for Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques to make his first voyage into space.

An investigat­ion determined that a malfunctio­ning sensor caused a Soyuz rocket to fail shortly after it was launched in Kazakhstan on Oct. 11, the executive director of the Russian space agency announced.

Sergei Krikalyov said the malfunctio­n caused one of the rocket’s four side boosters to collide with the second stage of the rocket.

With the probe now complete, Krikalyov said the agency is preparing to resume manned launches to the station as early as Dec 3.

The crew is expected to include Saint-Jacques, who was originally scheduled to fly to the station Dec. 20 on a six-month mission.

The 48-year-old astronaut recently told The Canadian Press that the exact date of his flight was likely to change after Russia’s space agency suspended all space flights as it probed the failure.

“Once they finish their work, we’ll know whether the launch will happen on time, later or maybe even ahead of time,” Saint-Jacques said on Oct. 24. “We don’t know. We’re getting ready for every option, (and) I’ll be ready whatever happens.”

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