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Soyuz Spacecraft Docks With International Space Stations

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  • Korolyov (AFP) Oct 20, 2003
    The next crew of the International Space Station docked at the orbiting craft Monday for a six-month mission with a Spanish astronaut on board, the first European to travel to space since the Columbia disaster earlier this year.

    The Soyuz TMA-3 craft, manned by American Michael Foale, Russian Alexander Kaleri and Spaniard Pedro Duque, docked at 0711 GMT.

    The successful docking manoeuvre met with a burst of applause and smiles among officials at the Russian space flight control centre outside Moscow, where images of the docking were clearly visible on television screens.

    After opening the hatches between the Soyuz and the ISS, the crew stepped through into the station some three hours later, to be greeted by the current US-Russian crew, Edward Lu and Yuri Malenchenko.

    The vessel blasted off from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Saturday to relieve a US-Russian crew that has been there for six months.

    The take-off came three days after the successful launch of the first manned spaceship by China, propelling it into the elite club of countries with manned space programmes alongside Russia and the United States.

    The mission is seen as a boost for the European space programme, as it is the first space flight for a European astronaut to the ISS since the disintegration of the American space shuttle Columbia on February 1.

    Russia has been the only country servicing the ISS since the United States grounded its shuttle program following the breakup of Columbia as it returned to earth from the station.

    Jean-Jacques Dordain, director of the European Space Agency (ESA), said that despite the technical problems encountered after the Columbia disaster "the activities on the ISS continue thanks to the Russians who permit us to have access to the station while we await the return to operation of the shuttle".

    Foale and Kaleri, members of the eighth permanent ISS mission, are replacing Lu and Malenchenko, who have been on the ISS for six months. They will stay onboard the space station until April 2004.

    Duque had been scheduled to fly to the ISS in April for an eight-day stay to carry out a range of scientific experiments, but he was bumped off the Russian flight after it was commandeered to take up a replacement crew for the ISS.

    One of the objectives of the eighth permanent mission is to prepare the station for the arrival of a European supply spaceship, the Automated Transfer Vehicle, whose first flight to the ISS is scheduled for September next year.

    Duque, whose 10-day mission is supported by the Spanish ministry of science and technology, is to carry out 24 experiments in the fields of life and physical sciences, Earth observation, education and technology.

    ESA is one of the main partners along with Russia and the United States in the 16-nation ISS project.

    A member of ESA's astronaut corps since 1992, Duque becomes the sixth European, and first Spaniard, to visit and work on the International Space Station. He flew once before to space on a US shuttle in 1998.

    Duque will land on October 28 in a Soyuz capsule with Malenchenko and Lu in Kazakhstan.

    All rights reserved. � 2003 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.

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    Paris (ESA) Oct 08, 2003
    Before the green light can be given for the launch of Jules Vernes in autumn 2004, another Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) has to first successfully fly the same mission. Next year, prior to the inaugural ATV mission, this ATV will fly a full mission though launch, docking and undocking from ISS, to controlled destructive re-entry over the Pacific.



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