The Soyuz TMA-08M spacecraft carrying three new Expedition 35 crew members
docked with the International Space Station’s Poisk module at 10:28 p.m. EDT
Thursday, completing its accelerated journey to the orbiting complex in less
than six hours.
Soyuz Commander Pavel Vinogradov and Alexander Misurkin of the Ru
ssian Federal
Space Agency (Roscosmos) and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, who launched from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 4:43 p.m. (2:43 a.m. Friday, Baikonur time)
are the first station crew members to take this expedited route to the orbiting
laboratory. The Soyuz reached the station after only four orbits instead of the
usual two-day launch-to-docking mission profile for a Russian spacecraft. While
this is the first crewed spacecraft to employ this technique, Russian space
officials successfully tested it with the last three Progress cargo vehicles.
After the hatches opened at 12:35 a.m. Friday, Cassidy, Vinogradov and Misurkin
joined Commander Chris Hadfield of the Canadian Space Agency and Flight
Engineers Tom Marshburn of NASA and Roman Romanenko of Roscosmos who have been
residing at the orbital laboratory since Dec. 21, 2012. All six crew members
crew then participated in a welcome ceremony with family members and mission
officials gathered at the Russian Mission Control Center in Star City near
Moscow.
Expedition 35 will operate with its full six-person crew complement until May
when Hadfield, Marshburn and Romanenko return to Earth aboard their Soyuz
TMA-07M spacecraft. Their departure will mark the beginning of Expedition 36
under the command of Vinogradov, who along with crewmates Cassidy and Misurkin
will maintain the station as a three-person crew until the launch of three
additional flight engineers in late May. Cassidy, Vinogradov and Misurkin are
scheduled to return to Earth in September.
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