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Автор ДмитрийК, 22.12.2005 10:58:03

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tnt22

https://blogs.nasa.gov/stationreport/2020/04/01/iss-daily-summary-report-4012020/
ЦитатаISS Daily Summary Report - 4/01/2020

Fluid Shifts:
 :
The crew performed the setup for baselining eye Fundoscope images. Fluid Shifts is a NASA investigation, divided into Dilution Measurements, Baseline Imaging, and Imaging with Chibis. The Chibis hardware is used to perform the Lower Body Negative Pressure (LBNP) part of the experiment. The Fluid Shifts experiment investigates the causes for severe and lasting physical changes to astronaut's eyes. Because the head-ward fluid shift is a hypothesized contributor to these changes, reversing this fluid shift with a LBNP device is being evaluated as a possible intervention. Results from this study may help to develop preventative measures against lasting changes in vision and prevention of eye damage.
NanoRacks Module-51:
 :
The crew performed and photo documented the second Vitamin C flask experiment status check. This completes the operation objectives for Module-51. These sub experiments are the Vitamin-C Flask with syringe, Waxworm flask, Adipic acid and Venom flex plates, Yeast and amylase mixture tubes, and Flask with Flatworms. Inspections of the experiments went well and the hardware was stowed. NanoRacks Mod-51 itself is an aluminum module with a Velcro lid that can accommodate various sub-experiments.
NanoRacks Module-9:
 :
The crew performed the operations on the NanoRacks Module-9 tube which involves the mixture of Tube #2, which studies the ability of Quinoa (a type of grain) growth in microgravity. NanoRacks-National Center for Earth and Space Science Education-Gemini includes 41 microgravity experiments designed by students in grades 5 through 12 and college. The experiments range from examinations of water filtration and purification to synthetic soil production, rust formation, antibiotic effectiveness, growth and development of micro-aquatic organisms, and growth of plant, fungi, and bacteria. Each was chosen from more than 3,000 entries submitted by more than 23,000 U.S., Canadian, and Brazilian students. The experiments use NanoRacks MixStix, miniature laboratories activated by the ISS crew and are eventually returned to the student teams on Earth for analysis.
Mobil Servicing System (MSS) Operations:
 :
Tonight, robotics ground controllers (ROBO) will power up the MSS and maneuver the Space Station Remote Manipulator System (SSRMS) and the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator (SPDM) to install the newly arrived Bartolomeo Science Platform. Installation is expected to be completed on Thursday morning at ~1:00 am CT. Once installed, ROBO will finish deploying the remaining platform booms Thursday evening at ~9:00 pm CT.

The European external platform 'Bartolomeo' is an enhancement of the ISS European Columbus Module and its infrastructure. Designed to meet user requirements from the commercial and institutional sector, Bartolomeo is a new external payload hosting facility on the ram side of Columbus that is mechanically attached to the ram-facing primary and secondary trunnions, and uses the Columbus Parking Position Interface (PAPOS) for electrical and data interfacing.
SpaceX-20 (SpX-20) Dragon Cargo Operations:
 :
Today, the crew continued to perform Dragon cargo operations in preparations for Dragon departure on April 6, 2020.
Water Processor Assembly (WPA) Multi-filtration (MF) Bed Sample Collection:
 :
Today, the crew performed a Life Support Rack (LSR) hose reconfiguration in preparation for a WPA MF Bed return sample collection. The crew previously experienced an issue with connecting a hose normally used to take MF bed samples; and as a result, ground teams had the crew reconfigure the LSR hoses to free up a like hose to re-attempt return sampling. The hose taken from the LSR was connected to the WPA nominally and the WPA MF Bed SpX-20 return sample was collected.
Systems Operations Data File (SODF) DEPLOY:
 :
Today, the crew replaced their Medical Checklists and EVA wrist Cuff Checklists with updated documentation delivered on SpX-20. The retired EVA Cuff Checklists will be returned on SpX-20.

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Цитата Airbus Space‏ @AirbusSpace 2 ч. назад

Job done! Demanding technical operations are now complete & the Airbus built #Bartolomeo platform has been mounted on the #ISS, on the @esa Columbus laboratory. Getting closer to more commercial research in low Earth orbit! https://www.airbus.com/space/space-infrastructures/bartolomeo.html ...




tnt22

https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2020/04/02/science-expands-on-station-dragon-departs-on-monday/
ЦитатаScience Expands on Station, Dragon Departs on Monday

Mark Garcia
Posted Apr 2, 2020 at 2:39 pm


NASA astronaut Jessica Meir strikes a superhero pose in the weightless environment of the International Space Station.

The International Space Station expanded its research capabilities overnight after robotics controllers installed a new external science platform. Meanwhile, the Expedition 62 crew is packing cargo for return to Earth while getting ready for its own departure.

Europe's latest contribution to the orbiting lab, Bartolomeo, was attached to the outside of the Columbus laboratory module early Thursday morning. Robotic engineers remotely commanded the Canadarm2 robotic arm and the Dextre robotic hand and completed the fine-tuned installation work over two days. Bartolomeo, delivered last month aboard the SpaceX Dragon cargo craft, gives private and institutional researchers the ability to command and control science payloads outside the space station.

Commander Oleg Skripochka with NASA Flight Engineers Jessica Meir and Andrew Morgan are preparing to end their mission in space on April 17. They checked their Sokol launch and entry suits they will wear when they parachute to Earth inside the Soyuz MS-15 crew ship for leaks today. The crew is also gathering personal items for stowage inside the Soyuz spaceship.

Before they leave, the SpaceX Dragon space freighter will return to Earth after being released from the Canadarm2 on Monday at 9:52 a.m. EDT. Meir and Morgan will finish loading over 4,000 pounds of station hardware and research samples, including live mice and plant cells, late Sunday. NASA TV will begin its live coverage of Dragon's departure on Monday at 9:30 a.m.

The station boosted its orbit again today raising it to the correct altitude enabling the new Expedition 63 crew to launch and dock on April 9 inside the Soyuz MS-16 crew ship. NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and Roscosmos cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner will take a six-hour ride to their new home in space and begin a 195-day mission aboard the orbital lab.

tnt22

ЦитатаLuca Parmitano blows out his virtual candle on the Astro Pi

European Space Agency, ESA

2 апр. 2020 г.

During Luca's Mission Beyond, we sent warm wishes to the astronaut on his birthday (27 September) onboard the ISS by gifting a virtual candle to blow out on an Astro Pi.

Astro Pi computers come with a set of sensors and gadgets that can be used to run great scientific experiments by means of computer coding. This set of sensors is called 'Sense HAT' (that stands for 'Hardware Attached on Top').

The Sense HAT add-on board was specially created for the Astro Pi competition. The board gives Astro Pi the ability to 'sense' and make many kinds of measurements, from temperature to movement, and to output information using a special display  - the  8x8 LED matrix. The Astro Pis are also equipped with a joystick and buttons -  just like a videogame console!
https://www.youtube.com/embed/-W9a3MOKitk (0:58)

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ЦитатаSpace to Ground: Bartolomeo: 04/03/2020

NASA Johnson

3 апр. 2020 г.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/0Sf3Z60QPGk?feature=oembed (2:03)

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https://blogs.nasa.gov/stationreport/2020/04/02/iss-daily-summary-report-4022020/
ЦитатаISS Daily Summary Report - 4/02/2020

Veggie PONDS Validation:
 :
The crew removed the Germination Cap from each Veggie Ponds Module and added water to reservoirs of each module in both facilities. Photos were taken and plant thinning was performed as needed. Organisms grow differently in space, from single-celled bacteria to plants and humans. Future long-duration space missions will require crew members to grow their own food. Therefore, understanding how plants respond to microgravity and demonstrating the reliable vegetable production on orbit are important steps toward that goal. Veggie PONDS uses a newly developed passive nutrient delivery system and the Veggie plant growth facility aboard the ISS to cultivate lettuce and mizuna greens which are to be harvested on-orbit, and consumed, with samples returned to Earth for analysis.
Engineered Heart Tissues:
 :
The crew performed sample fixations on selected tissue chambers and performed cell culture media exchanges on the remaining tissue chambers. A Human iPSC-based 3D Micro-physiological System for Modeling Cardiac Dysfunction in Microgravity (Engineered Heart Tissues) assesses human cardiac function in microgravity. It uses 3D cultured cardiac muscle tissue that mimics the architecture and function of adult human cardiac muscle. A magnet-based sensor placed underneath the tissue culture chamber allows real-time, non-destructive analysis of the functional performance and maturation of the tissues in space, which is compared with those cultured on Earth.
Mobile SpaceLab:
 :
The crew de-installed and stowed the Mobile SpaceLab hardware. This completes the objectives for this experiment. The Mobile SpaceLab is a tissue and cell culturing facility that launches and returns on International Space Station (ISS) resupply vehicles to offer investigators a quick-turnaround, high-throughput platform to perform sophisticated microgravity biology interrogations. The Mobile SpaceLab operates with autonomous microfluidic delivery of multiple reagents as well as automated brightfield and fluorescence microscopy. The Mobile SpaceLab can perform a biology experiment autonomously for up to a month on the ISS without the need for crew operations.
Bartolomeo:
 :
The ground robotic teams successfully installed the new Bartolomeo platform on to the Columbus module. Check was completed and the Antenna boom and OSIRIS boom were successfully deployed. The European external platform Bartolomeo is an enhancement of the ISS European Columbus Module and its infrastructure. Designed to meet user requirements from the commercial and institutional sector, Bartolomeo is a new external payload hosting facility on the ram side of Columbus that is mechanically attached to the ram-facing primary and secondary trunnions, and uses the Columbus Parking Position Interface (PAPOS) for electrical and data interfacing.
SpX-20 Preparation for Unberth/Release:
 :
Several activities on the plan were in preparation for SpX-20 unberth and release. The crew installed a single stowage locker, transferred the Mobile Spacelab payload onto Dragon and completed Dragon release and departure proficiency training. Currently, SpX-20 is scheduled to unberth on April 6th.
Queso Service Pack:
 :
Crew performed configurations changes to the iPads onboard following the Queso Service Pack deploy. As part of the Queso SP, the ISS server was upgraded and split in two requiring the crew to update their connection settings and bookmarks on the iPads.

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https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/04/02/pandemic-prompts-few-changes-to-busy-month-on-space-station/
ЦитатаPandemic prompts few changes to busy month on space station
April 2, 2020 | Stephen Clark


The International Space Station's robotic arm and Dextre, a two-handed robotic aide, extract the European Bartolomeo platform fr om the trunk of SpaceX's Dragon cargo craft in this March 25 photo. Credit: NASA

U.S. and Russian vehicles ferrying crews and cargo will continue traveling to and from the International Space Station this month, sustaining the orbiting lab in its 20th year of continuous human occupation amid an escalating pandemic on Earth.

A new European platform was also robotically installed outside the space station early Thursday, giving the international research lab a new outdoor deck to host a range of materials science, Earth observation and space science instruments.

NASA has deemed the space station's continued operations a top priority as other agency programs are shut down or slowed during the coronavirus pandemic.

Under the command of controllers on the ground, the station's Canadian-built robotic arm and the two-armed robotic aide Dextre installed the Bartolomeo platform outside the space station's European Columbus science module.

The process to install the platform occurred over two days, NASA said, after the robotic arm pulled the Bartolomeo science deck from the unpressurized trunk of a SpaceX Dragon cargo capsule. The Dragon cargo freighter delivered Bartolomeo and an array of other hardware and science experiments to the space station March 9 following a launch from Cape Canaveral.

But a spacewalk to route wiring and bring the Bartolomeo facility into use has been postponed. The excursion was originally planned in mid-April, when the space station is temporarily back at a full staffing level of six crew members.

Gary Jordan, a NASA spokesperson, said Wednesday that station managers are no longer pursuing a spacewalk during the crew handover later this month, the period between the arrival of a fresh three-man crew and the departure of the station's outgoing Expedition 62 crew.

"The decision was made after an evaluation of crew time during the eight-day handover period," Jordan said.

Once the final wiring harnesses are configured on a future spacewalk, Bartolomeo will be ready to host experiments, expanding the station's research capability.


The Bartolomeo platform is transferred from the Dragon cargo ship to the International Space Station. Credit: NASA

The Bartolomeo platform features 12 different mounting sites to accommodate science payloads, experiments, and technology demonstration packages. Developed by Airbus Defense and Space in partnership with the European Space Agency, the new facility is aimed at offering accommodations for commercial experiments outside the orbiting complex.

The Dragon supply ship is scheduled to be released from the space station's robotic arm at 9:52 a.m. EDT (1352 GMT) Monday, heading for re-entry and a parachute-assisted splashdown in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Los Angeles.

Before Monday's release, the Dragon will be unberthed from the station's Harmony module using the robot arm and maneuvered to a position around 30 feet, or 10 meters, below the research complex.

Closing out a nearly 31-day mission, the unpiloted cargo capsule will move a safe distance from the station before firing its Draco thrusters in a braking burn to slow down and re-enter the atmosphere. After jettisoning its disposable trunk, the pressurized capsule will plunge into the atmosphere, protected by a high-temperature heat shield, then deploy three main parachutes for a relatively gentle splashdown in the Pacific Ocean around 3:40 p.m. EDT (1940 GMT).

A SpaceX recovery team will be on station to pull the reusable spacecraft from the sea and haul it to the Port of Los Angeles, wh ere teams will begin handing over time-sensitive experiment specimens and more than 4,000 pounds of cargo to NASA.

The Dragon capsule's return to Earth on Monday will mark the final flight of SpaceX's first-generation cargo vehicle after 20 trips to the space station. The specific spacecraft currently at the station is on its third mission in space.

SpaceX's future resupply missions will use the upgraded Dragon 2 spaceship, which comes in crew and cargo variants.


Russian cosmonaut Ivan Vagner, commander Anatoly Ivanishin and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy pose outside their Soyuz MS-16 crew capsule at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Credit: Andrey Shelepin/Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center

At the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the members of the next space station crew are readying for launch April 9 to begin a six-month expedition in orbit.

NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy will join Russian commander Anatoly Ivanishin and flight engineer Ivan Vagner on the Soyuz MS-16 spacecraft for a six-hour trek to the space station. Liftoff from the Site 31 launch complex at Baikonur is scheduled at 4:05 a.m. EDT (0805 GMT; 1:05 p.m. Baikonur time) on April 9.

Because of concerns about the coronavirus pandemic, the families of the Soyuz crew members and media representatives will not be allowed to attend the launch at Baikonur.

The Soyuz MS-16 crew arrived at Baikonur aboard a Russian space agency jet March 24 after leaving their training site in Star City, Russia, near Moscow.

Cassidy and his crewmates are scheduled to dock with the space station's Poise module at 10:15 a.m. EDT (1415 GMT), joining station commander Oleg Skripochka and NASA flight engineers Jessica Meir and Drew Morgan.

The space station will be restored to its normal crew size of six for nearly eight days before Skripochka's crew floats into a different Soyuz spaceship April 16 for return to Earth.

NASA says station operations have not been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has restricted travel and triggered stay-at-home orders in many states across the country, limiting in-person work to essential businesses.

The space station flight control team is currently staffed at normal levels at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, according to NASA.

There are approximately 25 flight control positions at the space station control center in Houston during normal day-to-day operations. Another 10 or so flight control positions are needed during certain events, such as spacewalks or rendezvous operations. During crew nights or weekends,  when the station crew is largely off duty, around 10 flight controllers are required in the control center, said Gary Jordan, a NASA spokesperson.


File photo inside NASA's Mission Control Center at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. Credit: NASA

Skripochka, Meir and Morgan are scheduled to undock from the space station in their Soyuz MS-15 spaceship at 9:53 p.m. EDT on April 16 (0153 GMT on April 17). A few hours later, the Soyuz will fire braking rockets to fall back into the atmosphere, targeting a landing on the steppe of Kazakhstan at 1:17 a.m. EDT (0517 GMT; 11:17 a.m. local time in Kazakhstan).

That will leave Cassidy in command of the space station's Expedition 63 crew, which will have the station to themselves until the planned arrival of NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken on the first piloted test flight of SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule.

Hurley and Behnken are scheduled for launch in mid-to-late May from the Kennedy Space Center atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The duration of their stay on the space station was originally expected to last just a week or two, but could be extended to several months to provide the station with extra manpower during a time when the orbiting lab's U.S. segment would otherwise be staffed with just a single NASA astronaut.

Cassidy is flying in the final Soyuz seat NASA has purchased from Roscosmos, the Russian space agency. NASA is expected to soon announce the purchase of at least one additional Soyuz seat on an October launch from Baikonur, easing pressure on NASA's commercial crew providers -- SpaceX and Boeing -- as they prepare their U.S.-made human-rated crew capsules for launch.

The busy month of comings and goings at the International Space Station will wrap up in late April with the arrival of a Russian Progress refueling and resupply freighter.

The Progress spaceship is set to launch atop a Soyuz booster April 25 and will dock with the space station around three-and-a-half hours later with a load of propellant, water and cargo.

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Цитата Jessica Meir‏ @Astro_Jessica 45 мин. назад

The Engineered Heart Tissue experiment helps us understand how heart tissue functions in space. Love getting my hands on this cutting edge science, especially since one of the scientists and I used to work together back at @BrownUniversity! Read more: https://go.nasa.gov/2R64p5J





tnt22

Цитата2019-2020 JAXA Human Space Actuvity To the future, with Kibo

JAXA | 宇宙航空研究開発機構

3 апр. 2020 г.

日本語版はこちら→ Space has always been a distant frontier for humanity, but now, various satellites are orbiting to support our everyday life. The Low Earth Orbit (LEO), an area 2000km above ground, is the gateway to space, and there, approximately 400km in altitude, is the International Space Station (ISS) where various experiments using the space environment is conducted. Let's take a look at what kind of human space activities took place from 2019 to 2020.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/_Ipas64Juy4 (5:40)

zandr

http://novosti-kosmonavtiki.ru/news/53909/
ЦитатаАстронавт Джессика Меир из космоса дала израильтянам советы по самоизоляции
 Астронавт Джессика Меир, находящаяся сейчас на Международной космической станции, призывает израильтян следить за своим физическим и психическим здоровьем, передает STMEGI-Новости.
В этот четверг, в твиттер-аккаунте посольства США в Израиле еврейский астронавт Джессика Меир обратилась к израильтянам и всем жителям планеты с советами о том, как оставаться в хорошем физическом и психическом состоянии здоровья, постоянно находясь дома. Сама же Меир сейчас находится на Международной космической станции.
В видео, выложенном ны аккаунте посольства, Меир говорит:
Цитата«Для нас, космонавтов, очень непривычно наблюдать за тем, что происходит сейчас на Земле. Кажется, что мы вернемся из полета на совершенно переменившуюся планету».
Отвечая на вопрос посольства о том, как жителям стоит находить себе занятия и поддерживать свое здоровье в условиях самоизоляции, Меир заметила:
Цитата«Здесь, на станции, это такая же проблема для нас.
И мне кажется, что существует множество способов облегчить себе жизнь в таких условиях. Например, мы обязательно придерживаемся распорядка дня. Так, мы каждый день выполняем упражнения, чтобы оставаться в хорошей форме. Думаю, каждому известно, что физические упражнения важны не только для нашего тела, но и для психического здоровья. Мы, астронавты, уделяем много внимания нашему психическому состоянию».
Как же поддерживать свое самочувствие в период самоизоляции? Едва ли кто-то сможет ответить на этот вопрос лучше, чем астронавт НАСА Джессика Меир.
Астронавт также отметила важность регулярного общения с друзьями и близкими. Для этого, по ее словам, можно использовать видеосвязь.
Цитата"Мы часто звоним своим близким с космической станции для психологической поддержки», - делится с нами Меир.
А.Ж.

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https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-tv-to-air-us-cargo-ship-departure-from-space-station-1
ЦитатаApril 2, 2020
MEDIA ADVISORY M20-043

NASA TV to Air U.S. Cargo Ship Departure from Space Station


SpaceX's Dragon resupply ship slowly approaches the orbiting lab as both spacecraft were orbiting 258 miles above the Mediterranean Sea Dec. 9, 2019. Filled with more than 4,000 pounds of valuable scientific experiments and other cargo, Dragon is now set to leave the International Space Station Monday, April 6.
Credits: NASA

Editor's note, April 3, 2020Dragon's departure from the International Space Station has been rescheduled to Tuesday, April 7. NASA TV coverage begins at 8:45 a.m. EDT.

Filled with more than 4,000 pounds of valuable scientific experiments and other cargo, a SpaceX Dragon resupply spacecraft is set to leave the International Space Station Monday, April 6. NASA Television and the agency's website will broadcast its departure live beginning at 9:30 a.m. EDT.

Robotic flight controllers at mission control in Houston will issue commands at 9:52 a.m. to release Dragon using the station's Canadarm2 robotic arm. Expedition 62 Flight Engineer Andrew Morgan of NASA will back up the ground controllers and monitor Dragon's systems as it departs the orbital laboratory.

Dragon will fire its thrusters to move a safe distance from the station, then execute a deorbit burn as it heads for a parachute-assisted splashdown around 3:40 p.m. in the Pacific Ocean, southwest of Long Beach, California. The splashdown will not air on NASA TV.

Dragon launched on the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket March 6 from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida and arrived at the space station three days later.

Some of the scientific investigations Dragon will return to Earth include:

Generating a nutritional meal

Planning ways to supply food for a multi-year mission on the Moon or Mars may require making food and nutrients in space. BioNutrients demonstrates a technology that enables on-demand production of nutrients needed during long-duration space missions. Although designed for space, this system also could help provide nutrition for people in remote areas of our planet.

Toward printing human organs in space

Biological printing of the tiny, complex structures found inside human organs, such as capillaries, is difficult in Earth's gravity. The BioFabrication Facility (BFF) attempts to take the first steps toward the printing of human organs and tissues in microgravity. The facility may also help maintain the health of crews on deep space exploration missions by producing food and personalized pharmaceuticals on demand.

Helping the heart

The Engineered Heart Tissues (EHTs) study looks at how human heart tissue functions in space. It uses unique 3D tissues made from heart cells derived from human induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (hiPSCs), essentially adult stem cells. Researchers expect significant differences in function, structure and gene expression between EHTs in microgravity and those on the ground. Understanding these differences could help them find ways to prevent or mitigate problematic changes on future long-duration missions.

Biofilm festival

Samples from the Space Biofilms investigation, which examines microbial species and their formation of biofilms, are returning on Dragon. Biofilms are collections of one or more types of microorganisms - including bacteria, fungi and protists - that grow on wet surfaces. Better control of biofilms may help maintain crewed spacecraft and protect the health and safety of crew members as well as help prevent the introduction of Earth-based microbes to planetary bodies on which humans land.

These are just a few of the hundreds of investigations providing opportunities for U.S. government agencies, private industry and academic and research institutions to conduct microgravity research that leads to new technologies, medical treatments and products that improve life on Earth. Conducting science aboard the orbiting laboratory will help us learn how to keep astronauts healthy during long-duration space travel and demonstrate technologies for future human and robotic exploration beyond low-Earth orbit to the Moon and Mars.

For almost 20 years, humans have lived and worked continuously aboard the International Space Station, advancing scientific knowledge and demonstrating new technologies, making research breakthroughs not possible on Earth that will enable long-duration human and robotic exploration into deep space. As a global endeavor, 239 people from 19 countries have visited the unique microgravity laboratory that has hosted more than 2,800 research investigations from researchers in 108 countries.

-end-

Last Updated: April 3, 2020
Editor: Sean Potter

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https://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/schedule.html
ЦитатаNASA Television Upcoming Events

Watch NASA TV

ALL TIMES EASTERN U.S. TIME​

April 7, Tuesday
8:45 a.m. - Coverage of the departure of the SpaceX/Dragon cargo craft from the International Space Station; release scheduled at 9:15 a.m. EDT - Johnson Space Center (All Channels)

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Опубликован изменённый вариант брошюры экспедиции 62

exp-62-summary_final.pdf - 914.6 KB, 2 стр, 2020-02-28 20:44:30 UTC


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https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2020/04/06/station-gets-ready-to-send-off-cargo-ship-and-welcome-new-crew/
ЦитатаStation Gets Ready to Send off Cargo Ship and Welcome New Crew

Mark Garcia
Posted Apr 6, 2020 at 3:32 pm


The SpaceX Dragon resupply ship is pictured during Expedition 58 before its release from the Canadarm2 in January of 2019.

A Russian rocket rolled out to its launch pad today as a new crew gets ready for liftoff to the International Space Station. Meanwhile, the Expedition 62 crew will send off a U.S. cargo craft on Tuesday packed with science and hardware.

Russia's Soyuz MS-16 crew ship stands at its launch pad in Kazakhstan today after rolling out from its processing facility at daybreak. The rocket will launch on Thursday at 4:05 a.m. carrying NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and Roscosmos cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner. The new Expedition 63  trio will dock to the rear port of the Zvezda service module at 10:15 a.m. to begin a 195-day mission. NASA TV will broadcast the launch and docking activities live starting at 3 a.m.

NASA astronauts Andrew Morgan and Jessica Meir are loading the final critical research samples aboard the SpaceX Dragon resupply ship today. Dragon will splashdown in the Pacific Ocean carrying live mice, plant cells and other biological samples for analysis on Earth. Dragon is also packed with station hardware including spacesuit components for servicing and inspection.

Morgan will be monitoring departure activities when ground controllers command the Canadarm2 robotic arm to release Dragon on Tuesday at 9:15 a.m. EDT. This will end a 29-day stay at the Harmony module. Live NASA TV coverage begins at 8:45 a.m.

Station Commander Oleg Skripochka is getting ready for his departure when he Morgan and Meir return to Earth on April 17. The veteran cosmonaut will be packing the Soyuz MS-15 crew ship with personal items and station cargo over the next week-and-a-half.

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Источник

Эмблема 63-й экспедиции (6000px x 4800px)


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https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-coverage-set-for-chris-cassidy-crewmates-flight-to-space-station
ЦитатаApril 6, 2020
RELEASE M20-045

NASA Coverage Set for Chris Cassidy, Crewmates Flight to Space Station


At the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, Expedition 63 crew members Ivan Vagner (left) and Anatoly Ivanishin (center) of Roscosmos and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy (right) pose for pictures April 3 in front of their Soyuz spacecraft as part of their prelaunch activities. They will launch April 9 on the Soyuz MS-16 spacecraft from Baikonur on April 9 for a six-and-a-half-month mission on the International Space Station.
Credits: Roscosmos

A trio of space travelers, including NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, is scheduled to launch to the International Space Station on Thursday, April 9. NASA Television and the agency's website will provide live coverage of the crew's launch and arrival at the orbiting laboratory.

Cassidy, and Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, are set to launch aboard the Soyuz MS-16 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 4:05 a.m. EDT (1:05 p.m. Kazakhstan time). The four-orbit, six-hour journey to the space station will be the third flight for Cassidy and Ivanishin and the first for Vagner.

The new crew members will dock to the station's Zvezda service module at 10:16 a.m. They will join Expedition 62 Commander Oleg Skripochka of Roscosmos and NASA Flight Engineers Andrew Morgan and Jessica Meir, who will complete their station mission and return to Earth April 17 on the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft, which will land in Kazakhstan. Morgan launched July 20, 2019, for an extended duration mission. Meir and Skripochka launched to the space station aboard a Soyuz spacecraft on Sept. 25, 2019.

About two hours after docking, hatches between the Soyuz and the station will open, and the six crew members will greet each other.

Cassidy, Ivanishin and Vagner will become part of the Expedition 62 crew. Cassidy will become Expedition 63 commander upon the departure of Skripochka, Morgan and Meir. A change of command ceremony is planned for Wednesday, April 15.

Coverage of launch and docking activities is as follows (all times EDT):
    [/li]
  • 3 a.m. - Soyuz MS-16 launch coverage (launch at 4:05 a.m.)


  • 9:30 a.m. - Docking coverage (docking scheduled for 10:15 a.m.)


  • Noon - Hatch opening and welcome coverage


The crew members of Expedition 63 will be onboard to welcome NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, who are slated to arrive on NASA's SpaceX Demo-2 flight test, currently targeted to launch no earlier than mid-to-late May.

Check out the full NASA TV schedule and video streaming information at:


-end-

Last Updated: April 6, 2020
Editor: Sean Potter
Начало трансляции:
Пуск -                       07:00 UTC / 10:00 ДМВ
Стыковка -              13:30 UTC / 16:30 ДМВ
Открытие люков - 16:00 UTC / 19:00 ДМВ

tnt22

Цитата SpaceX‏ @SpaceX 3 ч. назад

Having delivered ~4,500 pounds of critical cargo and supplies last month, Dragon will depart the @space_station tomorrow at about 6:12 a.m. PDT



tnt22

Цитата ISS Research @ISS_Research 2 ч. назад

Nothing like MELFI in the morning aboard the @Space_Station! @AstroDrewMorgan talks through a common procedure--moving samples for a science experiment in and out of the Minus Eighty-Degree Laboratory Freezer for ISS (MELFI).
https://go.nasa.gov/39OZCfw 

(1:55)

tnt22

https://radiosputnik.ria.ru/20200406/1569660764.html
ЦитатаЖесткая обсервация: экипаж МКС изменит традиции перед стартом
20:44 06.04.2020 (обновлено: 21:27 06.04.2020)

Есть ли коронавирус в космосе и околоземном пространстве, ученые не знают. Но пока его точно нет на Международной космической станции. Таким образом, самые защищенные от коронавирусной инфекции люди сейчас не миллиардеры или главы государств, а именно они - Джессика Меир, Эндрю Морган и Олег Скрипочка, которые завершают свою миссию на борту МКС. У вируса нет никаких шансов попасть внутрь, кроме одного -вместе с космонавтами и астронавтами следующей экспедиции. И чтобы этого не произошло, докторам пришлось разработать, вероятно, самые жесткие карантинные меры на планете для нового экипажа, полет которого запланирован на 9 апреля с космодрома Байконур.

Ракета-носитель и пилотируемый корабль "Союз МС-16", в котором Анатолий Иванишин, Иван Вагнер и Крис Кэссиди отправятся на орбиту, уже доставлены на стартовую площадку в понедельник (6 апреля). Обычно на вывоз ракеты на космодром приезжают семьи основного экипажа и журналисты. Но в этот раз от традиции пришлось отступить из-за пандемии коронавируса.

Здоровью космонавтов и ранее уделяли пристальное внимания, но сейчас введены дополнительные меры предосторожности. Ведь если в ограниченном пространстве космической станции заболеет один член экспедиции, то инфекция быстро распространится и на других участников миссии. Кроме того, иммунная система на корабле и так постепенно ослабевает из-за невесомости, поэтому любое недомогание может протекать тяжелее, чем на Земле. Конечно, в крайнем случае, люди могут экстренно вернуться - такой механизм тоже отработан. Но оставить пустовать МКС - крайняя мера. Поэтому в этот раз перед тем, как отправиться на высоту 400 километров от поверхности Земли, члены экипажа отказываются от церемоний, которые долгие годы не нарушались.

Например, утром перед стартом космонавты, как и все их предшественники, распишутся на двери номера гостиницы, но массовые мероприятия с участием космонавтов были отменены. Не будут они и общаться с родственниками после того, как наденут скафандры - в этот раз близким не разрешили лететь на космодром. Не будет и традиционного доклада государственной комиссии перед посадкой в автобус, который отвезет космонавтов на стартовый комплекс, а предполетная пресс-конференция пройдет в онлайн-режиме. Модераторы из Международного мультимедийного пресс-центра МИА "Россия сегодня" в Москве озвучат вопросы, которые пришлют журналисты.
 :
Пандемия коронавируса повлияла на всю мировую космонавтику: в США временно приостановлена работа над проектом по высадке астронавтов на Луну "Орион". Она должна была состояться в 2024 году, и этот срок называли почти нереалистичным из-за сжатых сроков подготовки. Очевидно, что НАСА придется их пересмотреть.
Автор Евгений Майструк, радио Sputnik