Commander Oleg Novitsky, Thomas Pesquet and Peggy Whitson radioed in with ground control and were informed of the expected thruster burns that will take their Soyuz MS-03 spacecraft to the International Space Station after the automated rendezvous sequence is started at 19:39 GMT.
In a series of three large and three smaller burns the spacecraft will close in on the weightless research laboratory. The first burn will start at around 478 km out and each subsequent burn will move them closer. By the second burn Thomas, Oleg and Peggy will be at 203 km from the Station, then at 20:48 GMT they will be at 97 km. At 21:28 GMT they reach 2.5 km, four minutes later 1.1 km, two minutes after that they will be at 640 m from their destination.
These times and burns are estimates calculated on ground and can change. The astronauts will radio in again and will be in their Sokol pressure-suits, seated in the command module, with the hatch closed to the orbital module ready for the rendezvous and docking sequence.
A question of attitude
The International Space Station has two attitude-control systems that work together to keep the orbital complex pointing in the right direction. At around 20:10 GMT NASA’s mission control in Houston, USA, will hand over the Station’s attitude keeping to Moscow Mission Control in Russia who will flip the Station 180° using its thrusters so the Russian segment is flying forward.
The new orientation is done to keep the Soyuz MS-03’s docking port illuminated by the Sun so the astronauts can see their docking port, to keep the Station’s solar panels in the Sun for energy and so the Station’s Kurs antennas used by the Soyuz for docking are in perfect view throughout docking.
Docking is expected at 22:02 GMT and you can watch the final approach and hatch opening here.
Discussion: 2 comments
Interesting, what is purpose of your mission
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It’s the little changes which will make the biggest changes.
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