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Next ISS crew ready for flight in space
MOSCOW, Oct. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- The eighth expedition for the International
Space Station (ISS) is scheduled to fly and work on Saturday aboard a Russian
spaceship, Itar-Tass reported.
The Soyuz TMA-3 will take to the space outpost a three-member crew:
Alexander Kaleri from Russia, NASA astronaut Michael Foale and Spanish Pedro
Duque from the European Space Agency (ESA).
The Russian State Commission made the final decision on Friday to send for
the first time trio flight engineers instead of military pilots to serve at the
space station.
Kaleri and Foale will stay on board the ISS for 200 days, Duque will spend
10 days in orbit and return to the Earth late in October together with the
current crew of Yuri Malenchenko and Edward Lu, who have been working on the ISS
since April.
The new trio will conduct over 20 experiments and make a series of space
walks.
The back-up crew, comprising Valery Tokarev, William MacArthur and ESA
astronaut Andre Kuipers from Holland, is expected to fly to the ISS on April
2004, according to the Russian Space Agency.
Kaleri, 47, has a professional education background on space sciences and
technologies. Appointed as the commander of the forthcoming flight, he is
especially renowned for his working record including three space missions, whose
total length is 415 days, and 20 hours working in outer space.
Foale, 46, a Doctor of Astrophysics, has spent in orbit 168 days and made
three space walkouts with a total length of 19 hoursduring his past five space
missions.
Selected from some 700 Spanish contenders for the group of ESA astronauts,
40-year-old Duque will kick off his second space mission on Saturday. He made
his first nine-day-long space flight in October 1998 on board the Discovery
shuttle together with five Americans.
A senior Russian space official announced Friday that the country plans to
launch two manned Soyuz spacecraft and five Progress re-supply ships to the ISS
next year, Interfax reported.
The launch of the two Soyuz is aimed to serve both as rescue vehicles for
evacuating the crew from the station to the earth at any time, and rotate the
outgoing crew once every six months, saidDeputy head of the Russian Space Agency
Nikolai Moiseyev at the Baikonur cosmodrome.
Moiseyev said both the two manned and five unmanned flights are necessary,
even though the European Automated Transfer Vehicle should be ready, and the
first US shuttle flight since the Columbia crash is expected next October.
Following the Columbia disaster in February, Russian spacecraft that
currently conducts the tasks of delivering new missions and cargoes to the ISS,
became the only links to the 60-billion-US-dollar orbiting space hub.
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