Arab Times

Three-man crew reaches space station as US boosts research

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A new crew arrived at the Internatio­nal Space Station on Friday, giving NASA for the first time four astronauts to boost US research projects aboard the orbiting laboratory.

A Russian Soyuz capsule carrying three spacefligh­t veterans slipped into a docking port aboard the station at 5:54 pm EDT (2154 GMT) as the $100 billion research outpost sailed about 250 miles (400 km) over Germany, a NASA TV broadcast showed.

Strapped inside the capsule, which blasted off aboard a Soyuz rocket from Kazakhstan six hours earlier, were Randy Bresnik, with the US National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion; Sergey Ryazanskiy, with the Russian space agency Roscosmos; and Italy’s Paolo Nespoli, with the European Space Agency.

The men will join two NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut already aboard the station, a project of 15 nations.

Their arrival means the US space agency now has four crew members instead of three available for medical experiment­s, technology demonstrat­ions and other research aboard the station, the US space agency said.

The extra astronaut will effectivel­y double the amount of time for research, program manager Kirk Shireman said at a station conference last week.

NASA does not oversee the Russian staff, which was reduced to two in April until a long-delayed research module joins the station next year.

Previously, Russia flew three cosmonauts, with the remaining three positions filled by a combinatio­n of European, Japanese, Canadian and US astronauts, who are trained and overseen by NASA.

By the end of next year, NASA intends to begin flying astronauts aboard space taxis under developmen­t by SpaceX and Boeing. Both spaceships have room for a fourth seat, bumping the station’s overall crew size to seven once Russia returns to full staffing.

NASA is using the station to prepare for human missions to the moon and Mars and to stimulate commercial space transporta­tion, pharmaceut­ical research, manufactur­ing and other businesses. (RTRS)

 ??  ?? Russia’s Soyuz MS-05 rocket carrying a three-man crew from Italy, Russia and the United States, blasts off on July 28, from the Baikonour cosmodrome for a five-month mission on the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS). (Inset): US astronaut Randy Bresnik...
Russia’s Soyuz MS-05 rocket carrying a three-man crew from Italy, Russia and the United States, blasts off on July 28, from the Baikonour cosmodrome for a five-month mission on the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS). (Inset): US astronaut Randy Bresnik...

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