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Paris, France (ESA) Jun 19, 2006 With NASA's announcement Saturday of the launch of space shuttle Discovery on July 1, ESA astronaut Thomas Reiter, from Germany, is set to spend six to seven months in space as a member of the permanent crew of the International Space Station. Discovery is now scheduled to lift off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida at 2:48 Eastern Time. Docking with the ISS is scheduled for the third day of the mission. Once aboard the ISS, Thomas Reiter will join the current permanent crew, working alongside Russian commander Pavel Vinogradov and NASA flight engineer Jeffrey Williams. An ESA astronaut since 1992, Reiter already has experience of long-duration spaceflight, having spent 179 days onboard the Russian space station Mir in 1995-1996 on ESA's EuroMir 95 mission. With the new mission, dubbed Astrolab, ESA will inaugurate the long-term presence of European astronauts onboard the ISS. The mission also marks the return to a three-member permanent crew operating the orbital facility. This larger crew will mean that more time can be devoted to science experiments. Also marking the shuttle's eventual return to flight, this mission will in addition be a go-ahead signal for the resumption of ISS assembly, with the upcoming launches of European-built Nodes 2 and 3 and ESA's own Columbus laboratory. Already flying with Reiter on the Astrolab mission will be some key ESA equipment to be integrated on the Station, including the first minus 80-degree Laboratory Freezer for the ISS (MELFI), a facility developed for long-term conservation of biological samples and experiment results. This will also be the first time that a European control centre is used for a long-duration human spaceflight mission on board the ISS, paving the way for an increased ESA presence onboard the international facility with the arrival of the Columbus laboratory. The Columbus Control Centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, will be the hub of European activity during the Astrolab mission. ESA is planning to broadcast the mission to its headquarters and related facilities, and to provide experts for media interviews. Related Links Human Spaceflight and Exploration
![]() ![]() Excessive noise levels in the service module on the International Space Station have a negative effect on the hearing of astronauts, Russian doctors said Tuesday in a report. The 12th ISS crew, Russia's Valery Tokarev and William McArthur of the U.S., rounded off their mission, which began in October 2005, and returned to Earth on April 9. |
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