The
three-astronaut crew of the International Space
Station (ISS) took a short trip around the orbital block Tuesday to move
a Russian
lifeboat to a new parking spot.
ISS
Expedition 14 commander Michael
Lopez-Alegria and flight engineers Mikhail
Tyurin and Thomas
Reiter spent 20 minutes flying their Soyuz TMA-9 spacecraft between
docking ports to clear a berth for an upcoming cargo ship expected later
this month.
"Everything
is clean, everything is fine," said Tyurin, a veteran Russian cosmonaut serving
as Soyuz commander, during the short trip.
The Soyuz
relocation began at 3:14 p.m. EDT (1914 GMT), when the Expedition 14 astronauts
cast off from the aft docking port of the station's Russian-built Zvezda
service module as both spacecraft flew 222 statute miles (357 kilometers) over
the southern tip of South America. The three astronauts wore their Russian
Sokol spacesuits during the brief spaceflight.
Tyurin
deftly guided the Soyuz to a new Earth-facing berth on the space station's Zarya
control module, where it docked at 3:34 p.m. EDT (1934 GMT) as the spacecraft
passed over the west coast of Africa.
"It's a
very interesting sound actually," said Tyurin, a representing Russia's Federal
Space Agency, during the flight. "When the thruster's fire, it's almost as if
somebody's taking a drum stick and banging it on the hull a bit."
Today's
Soyuz relocation frees the aft-facing Zvezda docking port for the expected Oct.
26 arrival of Progress 23, an unmanned Russian cargo ship set to ferry about
4,800 pounds (2,177 kilograms) of food, fuel and supplies to the ISS, NASA commentator Rob Navias said.
Progress 23
is slated to launch at 9:40 a.m. EDT (1340 GMT) on Oct. 23 from Baikonur
Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan in Central Asia and take about three days - one day
longer than typical resupply flights - to reach the ISS due to the station's
orbital position, Navias added. Docking is set for 10:36 a.m. EDT (1436 GMT) on
Oct. 26.
The ISS is
also home to an older Russian cargo ship - Progress
22 - which arrived
at the stations' Pirs docking port on June 26.
Today
marked the 23rd day of the Expedition 14 mission for Lopez-Alegria -
a NASA astronaut - and Tyurin, but the 98th day in orbit for the Reiter,
who represents the European Space Agency. Reiter arrived
at the ISS on July 6 and served with the station's Expedition
13 crew before joining his new crewmates.
With their
Soyuz TMA-9 spacecraft now parked at its Zarya port - where it will stay until
its planned return to Earth in March 2007 - the Expedition 14 astronauts were
expected to perform a two-hour series of leak checks before once more opening
hatches to the ISS. They are expected to reenter the station by about 6:00 p.m.
EDT (2200 GMT) and go to sleep by 11:00 p.m. EDT (0300 Oct. 11 GMT), ending a long
day that began with crew wake-up at 4:30 a.m. EDT (0830 GMT), NASA officials
said.