. 24/7 Space News .
ESA Astronaut On Russian Flight To Space Station

A Soyuz Taxi just after ignition

Paris (ESA) Apr 18, 2002
A cosmopolitan crew representing the nations of Italy, Russia and South Africa will make history when they are launched into space next week from the Baikonur launch site in Kazakhstan.

Roberto Vittori, 37, a former Italian Air Force test pilot now a member of ESA's astronaut corps, will be the third European to visit the International Space Station.

Vittori is preparing for lift-off on Thursday 25 April in a Russian Soyuz spacecraft on a mission named Marco Polo that will replace the emergency rescue vehicle for the resident crew.

He will fly alongside Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gidzenko, the mission commander, and flight participant Mark Shuttleworth, South Africa's first person in space.

"Marco Polo is another step in Europe's significant role in the Space Station's development," said Vittori, speaking from Star City in Moscow during the final days of training before launch.

"Space is here to stay and will play a key role in our future. Part of my job is to inspire young people by showing them that space is very relevant to daily life."

Two days after reaching orbit Vittori, a Soyuz flight engineer, Gidzenko and Shuttleworth will approach and dock with the Space Station as the two craft travel at 27 000 km/h, some 400 km above the Earth.

Their three-person spacecraft will replace the Soyuz 'lifeboat' currently attached to the Space Station which, according to mission safety rules, has to be swapped after six months in orbit to ensure the rescue craft is always in top condition.

Marco Polo, Vittori's first flight, is being carried out under an agreement between ESA and the Italian space agency (ASI) on the one hand and the Russian space agency (Rosaviakosmos) and the Russian company RSC Energia on the other.

During his planned eight-day stay on board the Space Station with the resident crew -- Expedition Four commander Yuri Onufrienko and flight engineers Dan Bursch and Carl Walz -- Vittori will oversee four European experiments.

These will look at the forces involved in moving around in Microgravity and the effects on humans of cosmic particles during long missions, assess newly developed clothing, and test a non-intrusive blood pressure monitoring device.

"I have been training intensively for this mission since last August, and learning Russian in such a short time has been an added challenge," said Vittori.

"Flying in space has many similarities with flying an aircraft but the possibility of encounting the unknown is all part of the thrill and excitement of space."

Marco Polo -- following the successful Androm�de mission last October with ESA's French astronaut Claudie Haigner� -- is the latest in a series of European manned missions to the Space Station.

Belgian ESA astronaut Frank De Winne has already started training for a similar 'taxi' mission in October and Sweden's first astronaut Christer Fuglesang will be on the Space Shuttle for an assembly flight next spring.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Italian Parachutist Plans To Jump Into Record Books
Barcelona - Apr 18, 2002
A team of researchers from the Universitat Aut�noma de Barcelona, in coordination with the Instituto Nacional de T�cnica Aerospacial Esteban Terradas (INTA � Esteban Terradas National Institute of Aerospace Technology), is preparing for a person to jump from an altitude of 38,000 metres, on the edge of the stratosphere. This will be the highest altitude from which anybody has ever jumped, allowing for the first ever studies of human behaviour in such an extreme situation.







  • Italian Parachutist Plans To Jump Into Record Books
  • ESA Astronaut On Russian Flight To Space Station
  • Voyager Maintenance Work from 7 Billion Miles Away
  • NASA's Fuse Satellite Lit Again

  • Strengthening The Case For Life On Mars
  • Hope Yet The Beagle Will Land
  • Mars Odyssey's THEMIS Begins Posting Daily Images
  • How to Land Softly on a Hard Planet

  • ILS And Proton Successfully Launch Intelsat 903 Satellite
  • Successful Launch For 2 Boeing-Built Satellites
  • New Skies Bird Shipped To Kourou For April launch
  • Boeing Launches NASA Data Bird

  • Civilian Satellites Used to Help Plan Attacks in Afghanistan
  • Orbimage Completes Voluntary Bankruptcy Filing
  • Boeing Joint Venture Wins NASA Contract
  • The First Envisat Check-Up On The Earth

  • Hubble Hunts Down Odd Couples At The Fringes Of Our Solar System
  • Planetary Society to Congress: Restore Pluto and Europa Missions
  • Pluto Mission Planners Continue Development Of OuterPlanets Explorer
  • Exploring Pluto-Charon and the Kuiper Belt

  • Cosmic Vision 2020: The New ESA Science Programme
  • A Bow Shock Near A Young Star
  • NASA Says Its A New Dawn For Discovery
  • A Small Spherical Universe after All?

  • Moon and Earth Formed out of Identical Material
  • Lunar Soil Yields Evidence About Sun's Dynamic Workings
  • Unique tasks for SMART-1 in exploring the Moon
  • NASA Seeks Berth On India's Moon Mission

  • AeroAstro Leverages Globalstar To Build Low-Cost Asset Tracker
  • TechnoCom To Equip 12,500 Vehicles With GPS Trackers And More
  • Nomad Helps Keep Defense Personal
  • Europe Pushes Ahead With New GPS System Dubbed Galileo

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement