Autor Wątek: Sojuz MS-11  (Przeczytany 33105 razy)

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Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #75 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 04:48 »
Touchdown ! (po locie trwającym 203d 15h 16m)
Godzina lądowania: 04:47:50 CEST ( wg moich wskazań nieco później)
« Ostatnia zmiana: Czerwca 25, 2019, 04:56 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #76 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:05 »
Wg NASA lądownk Sojuza MS-11 osiadł pionowo

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #77 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:10 »
Oleg Kononenko, the Soyuz commander, is first out of the spacecraft. The 55-year-old has now completed four space missions, totaling 737 days in orbit.

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« Odpowiedź #78 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:14 »
Anne McClain is out of the Soyuz spacecraft after completing her first mission into space. McClain is a 40-year-old U.S. Army colonel and a former combat helicopter pilot who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom. A native of Spokane, Washington, McClain earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical/aeronautical engineering from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and earned a master’s degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Bath, and a master’s degree in international relations from the University of Bristol, both in England. NASA selected McClain as an astronaut candidate in 2013.

On her first space mission, McClain completed two spacewalks totaling 13 hours, 8 minutes.

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« Odpowiedź #78 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:14 »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #79 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:18 »
Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques, 49, has been helped from the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft by Russian recovery teams. Saint-Jacques completed one spacewalk on this mission, lasting 6 hours, 29 minutes.

Saint-Jacques is from Saint-Lambert, Quebec, holds a bachelor’s degree in engineering physics from from École polytechnique de Montréal in Canada. He earned a Ph.D. in astrophysics from Cambridge University in the UK, and a medical degree from Université Laval in Canada, and helped design adaptive optics and interferometry systems for telescopes, and radiological equipment for a hospital in France. Saint-Jacques was working as a medical doctor in an an Inuit community on Hudson Bay when he was selected as an astronaut candidate by the Canadian Space Agency in 2009.
« Ostatnia zmiana: Czerwca 25, 2019, 15:11 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #80 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:25 »
Już pierwszych dwoje astronautów jest w namiocie.Wyjątkowo szybko zdaje się wszystko przebiegać.
Mam wątpliwości czy zostało wykonane dobrze zdjęcie całej załogi (o ile zostało w ogóle wykonane)
« Ostatnia zmiana: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:27 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #81 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:51 »
Kononienko pod względem nalotu ustanowił rekord pobytu na ISS

«Есть посадка!» Экипаж ТПК «Союз МС-11» благополучно вернулся на Землю
25 июня 2019



(...) Для командира корабля Олега Кононенко это четвёртый полёт в его космической карьере. Теперь общее количество времени, проведённого космонавтом на орбите, составляет 737 суток. Это новый рекорд по пребыванию на Международной космической станции (МКС). (...)

http://www.gctc.ru/main.php?id=4653
https://www.roscosmos.ru/26472/
« Ostatnia zmiana: Czerwca 25, 2019, 06:03 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #82 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 05:54 »
Nagranie z lądowania
« Ostatnia zmiana: Grudnia 04, 2023, 05:44 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #83 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 06:27 »
Dłuższe nagranie



Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #84 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 06:50 »
NASA Astronaut Anne McClain, Crewmates Return from Space Station Mission
RELEASE 19-048 June 25, 2019


NASA astronaut Anne McClain is assisted out of the Soyuz MS-11 that returned her and crewmates Oleg Kononenko of the Russian space agency Roscosmos and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency back to Earth on June 24, 2019, after 204 days aboard the International Space Station. Credits: NASA Television

(...) McClain, Expedition 59/Soyuz Commander Oleg Kononenko of the Russian space agency Roscosmos and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency launched Dec. 3, 2018. They arrived at the space station just six hours later to begin their 204-day mission, during which they orbited Earth 3,264 times traveling 86,430,555 miles.

After post-landing medical checks, McClain and Saint-Jacques will return to Houston and Kononenko to Star City, Russia.

The Expedition 59 crew contributed to hundreds of experiments in biology, biotechnology, physical science and Earth science, including investigations into small devices that replicate the structure and function of human organs, editing DNA in space for the first time and recycling 3D-printed material. (...)

https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-astronaut-anne-mcclain-crewmates-return-from-space-station-mission
« Ostatnia zmiana: Czerwca 25, 2019, 06:58 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #85 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 06:59 »
O wielkości sił poszukiwawczych

"Два вертолета Ми-8 вылетели с аэродрома Байконур, два - из Караганды и 8 - из аэропорта Жезказгана. Также из Жезказгана вылетели два самолета Ан-12 и один Ан-26. Вертолеты доставят медицинскую бригаду и необходимое оборудование в зону предполагаемой посадки в 140 км юго-восточнее города Жезказган. Координаты капсулы передал самолет Ан-26, который засек сигналы радиомаяков, установленных на спускаемом аппарате", - сказали в пресс-службе.
https://tass.ru/kosmos/6587609

Offline Mikkael

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« Odpowiedź #86 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 08:20 »
Anne zaczęła serię ponad dwustudniowych misji amerykańskich astronautów? :) Czekamy na lipcowy start - wyznaczony dokładnie na 50 rocznicę lądowania Apolla 11  ;)
GG 8698011

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #87 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 14:14 »
Był to drugi pod względem długości lot załogowego Sojuza i jednocześnie drugi trwający powyżej 200 dni.

http://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=636.msg123270#msg123270

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« Odpowiedź #88 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 14:56 »
«Антаресы» дома! Фоторепортаж с места посадки СА ТПК «Союз МС-11» (Казахстан)
25 июня 2019

Сегодня в 05:48 по московскому времени спускаемый аппарат (СА) транспортного пилотируемого корабля (ТПК) «Союз МС-11» (позывной экипажа – «Антарес») с космонавтом Роскосмоса Олегом Кононенко, астронавтом ККА Давидом Сен-Жаком и астронавтом НАСА Энн МакКлейн совершил штатную посадку в казахстанской степи в 145 км юго-восточнее города Жезказган.















http://www.gctc.ru/main.php?id=4654

Offline Orionid

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« Odpowiedź #89 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 15:34 »


Sojuz wylądował
  25.06. o 02:47:50 w Kazachstanie wylądował aparat powrotny statku kosmicznego Sojuz MS-11.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n190616.htm#03

Sojuz MS-11 na Ziemi
BY KRZYSZTOF KANAWKA ON 25 CZERWCA 2019


Lądowanie Sojuza MS-11 /Credits - Bill Ingals, NASA

Dwudziestego piątego czerwca zakończyła się misja kapsuły Sojuz MS-11. Na Ziemię wróciło troje kosmonautów.

Start nastąpił 8 grudnia 2018 roku o godzinie 12:31 CET ze stanowiska numer 1 w Bajkonurze. Statek Sojuz trafił na orbitę po 9 minutach lotu. Sojuz MS-11 dotarł na Międzynarodową Stację Kosmiczną (ISS) w trybie szybkim – cumowanie do tego kompleksu orbitalnego nastąpiło tego samego dnia o 18:33 CET.

Na pokładzie Sojuza MS-11 znalazło się troje kosmonautów. Dowódcą lotu został Oleg Kononienko z Rosji, dla którego jest to już czwarty lot. Podczas poprzednich misji do Międzynarodowej Stacji Kosmicznej Kononienko spędził 533 dni na orbicie. Towarzyszyli mu debiutanci, Anne McClain z USA oraz David Saint-Jacques z Kanady. Po dotarciu do ISS załoga Sojuza MS-11 weszła w skład Ekspedycji 58 (do marca 2019), a następnie Ekspedycji 59 (do czerwca 2019).

W trakcie Ekspedycji 58 do ISS przycumował statek Dragon 2 w ramach bezzałogowej misji SpX-DM1. Ta misja kapsuły Dragon 2 przebiegła prawidłowo i była ważnym etapem w przygotowaniach do lotów załogowych nowej generacji pojazdów kosmicznych.

Wszyscy członkowie załogi Sojuza MS-11 w trakcie pobytu na ISS brali udział w spacerach kosmicznych. Oleg Kononienko uczestniczył w spacerze VKD-46, Anne McClain w spacerach EVA-52 i EVA-54]=https://kosmonauta.net/2019/04/spacer-eva-54-08-04-2019/]EVA-54, zaś David Saint-Jacques w spacerze EVA-54. Wszystkie spacery zakończyły się powodzeniem.

W nocy z 24 na 25 czerwca doszło do zakończenia misji Sojuza MS-11. Zamknięcie włazów nastąpiło o godzinie 22:15 CEST. Odłączenie Sojuza MS-11 od ISS nastąpiło o 01:25 CEST. Następnie Sojuz zszedł z orbity, a około 04:47 CEST nastąpiło lądowanie na stepach Kazachstanu. Lądowanie przebiegło prawidłowo. Załoga dobrze zniosła przeciążenia, choć spędziła ponad 200 dni na orbicie w warunkach mikrograwitacji.




Powrót Sojuza MS-11 na Ziemię / Credits – NASA TV

Na 20 lipca 2019 zaplanowano start Sojuza MS-13. Na pokładzie tej kapsuły znajdzie się Rosjanin, Włoch i Amerykanin. Do tego czasu na ISS pozostaje troje astronautów: jeden z Rosji i dwóch z USA.

(PFA)
https://kosmonauta.net/2019/06/sojuz-ms-11-na-ziemi/#prettyPhoto

Soyuz lands in Kazakhstan with international crew
June 25, 2019 William Harwood


The Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft fires its “soft landing rockets” at the moment of touchdown on the steppe of Kazakhstan. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

A Russian cosmonaut, his Canadian co-pilot and a NASA flight engineer boarded their Soyuz spacecraft, undocked from the International Space Station and plunged back to Earth Monday evening, landing on the balmy steppe of Kazakhstan to close out an action-packed 204-day mission.

With commander Oleg Kononenko at the controls, flanked on the left by Canadian David Saint-Jacques and on the right by veteran Army helicopter pilot Anne McClain, the Soyuz MS-11/57S spacecraft separated from the station’s upper Poisk module at 7:25 p.m. EDT Monday, setting up landing three hours and 22 minutes later.

For McClain, completing her first space flight, departing the station and leaving three crewmates behind — Expedition 60 commander Alexey Ovchinin, NASA flight engineer Nick Hague and Christina Koch — was bittersweet.

“It’s such a special place to live,” she said in a June 19 interview with CBS News. “We’re not up here visiting space, we’re up here living in space. One of my colleagues said it best the other day, you know, if you told me I was born here and everything on Earth was just a dream, I might almost start believing you. Because we are so at home up here. That is something so special.”

She added: “I think if I could have my friends and family visit, I might just stay forever.”

After backing a safe distance away from the space station, Kononenko monitored a four-minute 39-second deorbit rocket firing, starting at 9:55 p.m., that slowed the spacecraft by 286 mph, just enough to drop the far side of the orbit deep into the atmosphere.

Before plunging back into the discernible atmosphere at an altitude of about 62 miles, the Soyuz’s upper orbit module and its lower propulsion and power section were discarded to burn up in the atmosphere while the central crew module, the only one with a heat shield, fell back into the lower atmosphere.

Six minutes later, the crew cabin exited the region of maximum heating from atmospheric friction and deployed its parachutes to slow from a velocity of about 515 mph to a much more sedate 16 mph or so.

Finally, an instant before touchdown southeast of the town of Dzhezkazgan, six solid-propellant rocket motors ignited, slowing the ship to walking pace, just 3.4 mph, for an on-target landing at 10:47 p.m. EDT (8:47 a.m. local time).

“The Soyuz ride home, we have heard lots about it, somewhere between (riding in) a washing machine and a roller coaster, three-and-a-half hours of the most exciting ride that we’ll probably have in our life,” McClain said. “Definitely looking forward to a once in a lifetime ride.”

And she clearly enjoyed the experience. When recovery crews pulled her through the top hatch of the charred descent module, McClain pumped her fists, smiled broadly and looked remarkably fit after a voyage spanning spanning 203 days 15 hours and 16 minutes. That translates into 264 orbits and 86.4 million miles traveled since launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on Dec. 3.

McClain, Kononenko and Saint-Jacques were carried to nearby recliners for initial medical checks and satellite phone calls home to friends and family. All three appeared healthy and in good spirits.

“Everything was quite nominal as expected,” Kononenko said of the entry and landing. speaking through a translator. “We experienced maximum G loads of four Gs. … As far as the weather is concerned, after we come back from space we’re happy to see any kind of weather!”

Kononenko’s time in space over four space flights now totals 737 days. McClain and Saint-Jacques logged 204 days in orbit during their first space flight. During their stay aboard the station, the crew welcomed six visiting vehicles — three cargo ships, a SpaceX Crew Dragon test vehicle, a Russian Progress and a Soyuz — and helped with their departures.

In addition, Kononenko carried out two spacewalks, pushing his total to five, McClain conducted another two and Saint-Jacques one.


NASA astronaut Anne McClain, in good health and spirits after 204 days in space, is helped from the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

All three crew members were to be flown by helicopter from the landing site to Karaganda. From there, McClain and Saint-Jacques will head back to the Johnson Space Center in Houston aboard a NASA jet while Kononenko is flown home to Star City near Moscow.

With the departure of Kononenko and company, the Expedition 60 crew of Ovchinin, Hague and Koch will have the station to themselves until July 20 — the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing — when the Soyuz MS-13/59S spacecraft takes off from Baikonur carrying Alexander Skvortsov, NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan and Italian veteran Luca Parmitano.

On Aug. 22, the expanded six-member crew will welcome an unpiloted Soyuz — MS-14/60S — to the lab complex for a 10-day stay. The spacecraft will be the first launched atop an upgraded Soyuz 2.1a booster after several flights carrying Progress cargo ships. Assuming the rocket performs as expected, the Soyuz 2.1a booster is expected to begin operational Soyuz flights next year.

On Sept. 25, another Soyuz — MS-15/61S — will carry station veteran Oleg Skripochka to the outpost, along with NASA’s Jessica Meir and Hazzaa Ali Almansoori, a guest cosmonaut representing United Arab Emirates. That will be the final planned flight of the older Soyuz FG booster and the final planned use of Yuri Gagarin’s launch pad at Baikonur.

Almansoori will return to Earth on Oct. 3 after a 10-day stay aboard the station, riding home with Ovchinin and Hague. Koch, who rode into space with Ovchinin and Hague in March, is remaining in orbit for an extended mission, returning to Earth on Feb. 6 with Skvortsov and Parmitano.

At touchdown, Koch will have logged 328 days aloft — a single-flight record for a U.S. female — just 12 days shy of the U.S. single flight record of 340 days set by Scott Kelly.

“I like to think that a record isn’t how many days you spend up here, it’s what you do with each of those days,” she told CBS News. “So when you look at it that way, it actually isn’t a daunting thing, it’s a privilege to be a part of. It’s a reminder to me to bring my best to every day I have here.”

She said she hopes her record is “exceeded as soon as possible after my time, because that means we’re continuing to push the barriers.”

Koch will take Morgan’s seat for her ride home aboard the Soyuz MS-13/59S spacecraft, along with Skvortsov and Parmitano. Morgan remains aloft for an extended mission of his own, joining Skripochka and Meir for the trip back to Earth April 1 aboard the Soyuz MS-15/61S vehicle. His flight will total 256 days.

At some point this year or early next, SpaceX and Boeing hope to launch commercial crew ships to the space station, ending NASA’s sole reliance on the Soyuz for carrying U.S. and partner astronauts to and from the space station at a current cost of more than $80 million a seat.

SpaceX carried out a successful unpiloted test flight of its Crew Dragon spacecraft in March and had hoped to launch a piloted test flight using a different capsule in July. But those plans were put on hold after a catastrophic explosion in April during a ground test that destroyed the first capsule.

In what has become the “new normal” in the world of commercial spaceflight, the company and NASA have released virtually no information about what might have caused the mishap, what might be needed to correct it or when a piloted test flight might occur.

NASA’s internal space station traffic plan shows the “Demo 2” mission carrying NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley and Robert Behnken taking off no earlier than Nov. 15, but that’s believed to be more a placeholder in the station’s complex traffic pattern than an actual target.

Boeing, meanwhile, plans to carry out an unpiloted test flight of its CST-100 Starliner spacecraft in August, followed by a crewed test flight in the December timeframe. But again, no detailed timelines have been released and how realistic those target dates are is not yet known.

Along with welcoming the usual cargo ships and, possibly, one or more commercial crew capsules, the station crews face a daunting schedule of spacewalks starting with an August excursion to install a second commercial crew docking adapter atop the station’s forward Harmony module.

Up to a half-dozen spacewalks are planned this fall to repair the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer particle physics experiment and the Russians have an EVA planned in November. NASA tentatively plans up to six spacewalks between now and next January to replace batteries in the station’s solar power system.

And throughout the work in orbit, NASA will be pressing ahead with plans to increase commercial use of the station, clearing the way for private-sector researchers and even space tourists to visit the lab complex.

“We are definitely in support of that,” McClain said. “It is the next logical step. Throughout history, every great achievement has been made first by the explorers and by the visionaries and then everybody else comes along. I think NASA has done an incredible job, along with many countries around the world, in exploring low-Earth orbit and the technologies needed to get there.

“Right now, what we’re seeing is NASA’s contributions in sharing all of the data and all the best practices with commercial industry in order to open up low-Earth orbit to more people, both people who are curious, tourists, who want to visit and just see what it’s like, to commercial industry, to medical industries, who can take over and really accelerate the investigations we’re doing here in low-Earth orbit.”
https://spaceflightnow.com/2019/06/25/soyuz-lands-in-kazakhstan-with-international-crew/

https://spaceflightnow.com/2019/06/24/american-canadian-russian-space-station-fliers-set-for-return-to-earth/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/

Wątek poświęcony kanadyjskiemu astronaucie: http://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=3461.msg127131#msg127131
i rosyjskiemu: http://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=2160.msg81611#msg81611

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Odp: Sojuz MS-11
« Odpowiedź #89 dnia: Czerwca 25, 2019, 15:34 »