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Sun, Apr 17, 2005

ISS Crew Exchange Underway

A Crowded House Is A Happy House

REAL TIME UPDATE: 1215 EDT -- After arriving Saturday night to dock with the International Space Station, the members of both ISS Expeditions 10 and 11 are going through the process of handing over the keys and preparing for the arrival of the space shuttle Discovery.

With Expedition 11 Commander Sergei Krikalev at the controls, the Soyuz spacecraft carrying Flight Engineer/NASA Science Officer John Phillips and European Space Agency (ESA) Astronaut Roberto Vittori of Italy docked to the station at 2220 EDT. The Russian spacecraft, designated Soyuz TMA-6, linked up automatically to the Pirs Docking Compartment as the Soyuz and the station flew over central Asia at an altitude of 220 statute miles. Within minutes, hooks and latches between the two vehicles joined together to form a tight seal.

Hatches between the Soyuz and the station were opened at 0045 Sunday. The two crews greeted one another with handshakes and hugs. The first activity scheduled for the five crewmembers was a safety briefing to familiarize the newly arrived trio with emergency escape procedures.

Krikalev and Phillips will remain on board the station until October. Vittori will return to Earth next week after eight days of scientific experiments on the complex under a commercial agreement between ESA and the Russian Federal Space Agency. The trio launched at dawn Friday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for their two-day journey to the outpost.

Aboard the station at the time of docking were Expedition 10 Commander and NASA Science Officer Leroy Chiao and Flight Engineer Salizhan Sharipov, who are wrapping up their six-month mission and who will ride home on their Soyuz TMA-5 capsule with Vittori on April 25 for a pre-dawn landing in central Kazakhstan. Today marked the 185th day in space for Chiao and Sharipov and their 183rd day on the station.

On hand for the docking activities at the Russian Mission Control Center outside Moscow were NASA Deputy Administrator Fred Gregory, NASA Deputy Associate Administrator for International Space Station and Space Shuttle Programs Michael Kostelnik, Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems Craig Steidle and ISS Program Manager William Gerstenmaier, along with Russian and European space officials.

On Sunday before they began an extended sleep period, the new crew transferred their custom-made Soyuz seat liners as well as cargo carried aloft on the Soyuz for the complex. Later in the day, initial briefings on the handover from the current residents to their replacements were to be conducted and the new Soyuz' systems will be deactivated.

Over the next week, Krikalev and Phillips will familiarize themselves with station systems and stowed equipment, conduct robotics training with the Canadarm2 robot arm, and receive detailed briefings on scientific payloads. Phillips and Chiao will also continue the maintenance and repair work on the cooling systems in the US airlock Quest for the resumption of spacewalk capability from the station this summer.

In addition, they will pack discarded gear and equipment for return to Earth on the Raffaello cargo module that will be brought to the station on the Space Shuttle's Return to Flight mission, STS-114, targeted for arrival next month on the Shuttle Discovery.

FMI: www.nasa.gov/station

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