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Moscow Takes The Helm Of ISS Control

File photo of Russia's ISS Control Room.

ISS-11 Crew To Spend 175 Days In Space
Moscow (SPX) Sep 26, 2005 - Expedition 11 crewmembers aboard the ISS will have spent 175 days in space by the time they complete their mission October 11, Russia's Federal Space Agency said Friday, reports RIA Novosti.

Agency spokesman Konstantin Kreidenko said that since boarding the station in April, crew Commander Sergei Krikalev and NASA Science Officer and Flight Engineer John Phillips have conducted 39 experiments, including in ecology, geophysics, biomedicine and power engineering, and have repaired an oxygen regenerating system.

The Expedition 12 crew, comprised of Russian cosmonaut Valeri Tokarev and NASA astronaut William McArthur, heads for the ISS aboard a Soyuz rocket on October 1 (September 30, GET). Space tourist Gregory Olsen will fly to the ISS together with the Expedition 12 crew and return with members of Expedition 11.


Wasington DC (SPX) Sep 24, 2005
NASA and Russian flight controllers outside Moscow are in control of the International Space Station, after mission control in Houston was evacuated ahead of Hurricane Rita.

Aboard the station, Expedition 11 Commander Sergei Krikalev and Flight Engineer John Phillips have a key piece of life support equipment up and running, just in time for the next space station crew.

The crew activated the repaired Elektron oxygen generator this week. The Elektron, which extracts oxygen from water, was put into service early Monday. Krikalev and Phillips repaired the Elektron with a new liquids unit that was brought up on a recent Progress spacecraft.

Krikalev and Phillips also performed maintenance on the on-board treadmill, a key piece of exercise equipment to help keep astronauts' bones and muscles strong during long stays in zero-gravity. They worked on an experiment designed to test the effects of certain compounds on kidney stones, and they collected water samples to be analyzed once they return to Earth.

The Expedition 11 crew is nearing the end of its six-month stay on the station, and crew members spent part of the week packing up their return spacecraft, the same Russian Soyuz that brought them to the station in April. They also tested out their shock-absorbing seats for their landing, scheduled for October 10, U.S. time.

With Hurricane Rita strengthening in the Gulf of Mexico and targeting the Texas shoreline, the space station program activated a well-rehearsed plan to allow flight controllers based at NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston, to evacuate.

They transitioned full control of the station to Moscow, where Russian mission control and a permanently staffed cadre of NASA flight controllers, known as the Houston Support Group, are keeping the station operating smoothly.

Other agency resources were tapped to ensure the station's safe flight. For example, at Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., two flight controllers arrived from Houston to maintain communications with the station through Goddard's Network Integrated Communications flight control room.

The next space station crew, Expedition 12's Bill McArthur and Valery Tokarev, are beginning their journey toward launch. They traveled this week from the Russian training facility at Star City to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, where they'll launch to the station Sept. 30 aboard a Soyuz.

During their station stay, McArthur and Tokarev will mark five years of continuous human presence in orbit and pursue the station's mission of learning how to live and work for long periods in space.

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NASA Had No Choice But To Buy Soyuz Flights
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 09, 2006
NASA's announcement last week that it will pay Roskosmos $43.6 million for a round-trip ride to the International Space Station this spring, and an equivalent figure for an as-yet-undetermined number of future flights to the station until 2012, represents the agency's acknowledgment that it had no alternative.







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