CAPE
CANAVERAL, Fla. - A U.S. entrepreneur making history as the world's
first female space tourist said hello to astronauts aboard the International Space
Station (ISS) early Tuesday while she and two professional spaceflyers continued their trek towards the orbital
laboratory.
"Hello
everyone, I look forward to seeing you on the station," said Anousheh Ansari, who is
riding aboard a Russian-built
Soyuz TMA-9 spacecraft with the station's next crew.
"We look
forward to welcoming you all onboard," ISS Expedition
13 flight engineer Jeffrey
Williams replied.
The call
came during a rare
conference call between three manned spacecraft circling the Earth. In
addition to the Soyuz ferrying Ansari and two Expedition
14 astronauts to the ISS, three astronauts currently live aboard the space
station itself while six others are on their way back to Earth aboard NASA's
Atlantis shuttle.
"I know we
have a lot to learn from all of them, and we look forward to our time together
especially having Anousheh onboard," Expedition 14
commander Michael
Lopez-Alegria, who is riding aboard the Soyuz
with Ansari and flight engineer Mikhail
Tyurin, told the Atlantis crew of Expedition 13.
"It's too bad the Atlantis crew won't get to meet her, but maybe some time in
the future."
Lopez-Alegria and Tyurin are relieving Williams and Expedition 13
commander Pavel Vinogradov, who have
lived aboard the ISS since their April arrival. The two Expedition 14
astronauts will welcome current Expedition 13 flight engineer Thomas
Reiter, of the European Space Agency, into their ranks, though Williams,
Vinogradov and Ansari are scheduled to return to Earth on Sept. 28.
Ansari is
the fourth paying visitor to the ISS and will spend nine days in space on a
trip brokered with Russia's Federal Space Agency by the
Virginia-based firm Space Adventures. A long-time advocate of private
spaceflight, Ansari served as a backup for Japanese
businessman Daisuke Enomoto, who was paying an
estimated $20 million for a trek to the ISS before failing
a final preflight medical check.
"I think
it's great," said Atlantis astronaut Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper, the only female member of the shuttle's
STS-115 crew, of Ansari's spaceflight in a
space-to-ground television interview after the spacecraft conference call. "I
don't think there's anything, you know, about being a space tourist or
astronaut. If the guys can do it, we can do it too."