What's the Indian connect to new crew at International Space Station

Updated : Nov 12, 2021 10:58
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Editorji News Desk

A SpaceX capsule carrying four astronauts has docked at the International Space Station. The orbiting outpost will be their home for the next six months.

Indian-American Raja Chari is the commander of the mission, which includes two other American and one German astronaut.

Chari, who is a US Air Force colonel, is making his first trip to space.

The crew will perform scientific experiments and maintain the orbiting research lab.

It took 21 hours for the flight from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre to reach the International Space Station on Thursday.

The flight was initially postponed from October 31, first for weather, then a "minor medical issue" affecting one of the crew

The one German and three US astronauts said it was an emotional moment when they first spotted the space station 20 miles (30 kilometres) distant — "a pretty glorious sight," according to Raja Chari, commander of the Dragon capsule.

"Floating in space and shining like a diamond," noted German astronaut Matthias Maurer. "We're all very thrilled, very excited." The Dragon's entire flight was automated, with Chari and pilot Tom Marshburn monitoring the capsule systems, ready to take control if necessary. At one point, they reported what looked like a "gnarled knob" or possibly a small mechanical nut floating past their camera's field of view, but SpaceX Mission Control said it posed no concern. The docking occurred 263 miles (423 kilometres) above the eastern Caribbean.

Also watch: Meet the India born astronaut who will fly into space with Richard Branson

The station's welcoming committee consisted of three astronauts instead of the originally planned seven. That's because SpaceX returned four of the station residents on Monday, after the new arrivals' launch kept getting delayed.

While Chari, Marshburn, Maurer and NASA astronaut Kayla Barron were adapting to weightlessness — all but Marshburn are space rookies — the previous crew was adjusting to life back on Earth.

"Gravity sucks, but getting used to it slowly," Japanese astronaut Akihoki Hoshide tweeted.

The new crew will spend the next six months at the space station and, during that time, host two groups of visiting tourists. Russia will launch the first bunch in December and SpaceX the second in February

NASAspace flightSpaceX CrewInternational Space Station

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