Oleg Kononenko
Andre Kuipers (Medical)
Donald Pettit
Backup Crew: Commander: Yuri Malenchenko, RSA
Flight Engineer 1: Sunita Williams, NASA
Flight Engineer 2: Akihiko Hoshide, JAXA
The Russian Soyuz TMA-03M is a spaceflight to the International Space Station (ISS). It launched on 21 December 2011 from Site One at the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, carrying three members of Expedition 30 to the ISS. TMA-03M is the 112th flight of a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, since the first in 1967, and the third flight of the modernised Soyuz-TMA-M version. The docking with the International Space Station took place at 19:19 Moscow Time on 23 December, three minutes ahead of schedule.

The crew were Oleg Kononenko (Russia, commander), Andre Kuipers (the Netherlands) and Donald Pettit (United States). The Soyuz remained aboard the space station for the Expedition 30 increment to serve as an emergency escape vehicle if needed.
(NASA Exp.30 Third Space Flight) Engineer
(ESA Exp.30 Second Space Flight) Engineer
(RSA Exp.30 Second Space Flight)

                                                                      


(11F747)


Commander (Launch):
04 April 2011
















114
M
SM
Sub-Menu
menu
-
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122




























 


    










 









 









The Soyuz Space  Missions



Study
Research
Space Cosmology
Science Research
*
About
Science Research
Science Theories
Desk
Site Map
BookShelf




Copyright ©  by Nigel G Wilcox  ·  All Rights reserved  ·  E-Mail: ngwilcox100@gmail.com
Designed by Nigel G Wilcox
Powered By AM3L1A
Pages within this section: Soyuz  (HH)

Soyuz TMA-03M

Pages within this section:
courtesy: Wikipedia.org
spacefacts.de
Cosmonauts                
Soyuz 115 TMA-03M
 
The Soyuz spacecraft is composed of three elements attached end-to-end - the Orbital Module, the Descent Module and the Instrumentation/Propulsion Module. The crew occupied the central element, the Descent Module. The other two modules are jettisoned prior to re-entry. They burn up in the atmosphere, so only the Descent Module returned to Earth.

The deorbit burn lasted 256 seconds. Having shed two-thirds of its mass, the Soyuz reached Entry Interface - a point 400,000 feet (121.9 kilometers) above the Earth, where friction due to the thickening atmosphere began to heat its outer surfaces. With only 23 minutes left before it lands on the grassy plains of central Asia, attention in the module turned to slowing its rate of descent.

Eight minutes later, the spacecraft was streaking through the sky at a rate of 755 feet (230 meters) per second. Before it touched down, its speed slowed to only 5 feet (1.5 meter) per second, and it lands at an even lower speed than that. Several onboard features ensure that the vehicle and crew land safely and in relative comfort.

Four parachutes, deployed 15 minutes before landing, dramatically slowed the vehicle's rate of descent. Two pilot parachutes were the first to be released, and a drogue chute attached to the second one followed immediately after. The drogue, measuring 24 square meters (258 square feet) in area, slowed the rate of descent from 755 feet (230 meters) per second to 262 feet (80 meters) per second.

The main parachute was the last to emerge. It is the largest chute, with a surface area of 10,764 square feet (1,000 square meters). Its harnesses shifted the vehicle's attitude to a 30-degree angle relative to the ground, dissipating heat, and then shifted it again to a straight vertical descent prior to landing.

The main chute slowed the Soyuz to a descent rate of only 24 feet (7.3 meters) per second, which is still too fast for a comfortable landing. One second before touchdown, two sets of three small engines on the bottom of the vehicle fired, slowing the vehicle to soften the landing.
ISS032-E-005028 (1 July 2012) --- This close-up view shows the docking mechanism of the Soyuz TMA-03M spacecraft as it undocks from the International Space Station's Rassvet Mini-Research Module 1 (MRM-1) on July 1, 2012. Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, Expedition 31 commander; along with European Space Agency astronaut Andre Kuipers and NASA astronaut Don Pettit, both flight engineers, are returning from more than six months aboard the space station where they served as members of the Expedition 30 and 31 crews.
Soyuz TMA-03 Launch