Engineering:Soyuz MS-05

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Short description: 2017 Russian crewed spaceflight to the ISS
Soyuz MS-05
Expedition 52 Launch (NHQ201707280006).jpg
The launch of Soyuz MS-05
Mission typeISS crew transport
OperatorRoskosmos
COSPAR ID2017-043A
SATCAT no.42898
Mission duration139 days 4 hours 57 minutes 16 seconds
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftSoyuz MS
Spacecraft typeSoyuz MS 11F732A48
ManufacturerRKK Energia
Launch mass7080 kg
Crew
Crew size3
MembersSergey Ryazansky
Paolo Nespoli
Randolph Bresnik
CallsignBorei (Boreas)
Start of mission
Launch date28 July 2017, 15:41 UTC[1]
RocketSoyuz-FG
Launch siteBaikonur, Pad 1/5
ContractorProgress Rocket Space Centre
End of mission
Landing date14 December 2017, 08:38 UTC [2]
Landing siteSteppes of the Kazakhstan
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric orbit
RegimeLow Earth orbit
Inclination51.66°
Docking with ISS
Docking portRassvet nadir
Docking date28 July 2017, 21:54 UTC [1]
Undocking date14 December 2017, 05:14 UTC [3]
Time docked138 days 7 hours 20 minutes
Soyuz MS-05 crew.jpg
From left to right: Nespoli, Ryazansky, Bresnik
Soyuz programme
(Crewed missions)
 

Soyuz MS-05 was a Soyuz spaceflight which launched on 28 July 2017.[1] It transported three members of the Expedition 52 crew to the International Space Station. Soyuz MS-05 was the 134th flight of a Soyuz spacecraft. The crew consisted of a Russian commander, and a European and an American flight engineer. It returned to Earth on 14 December 2017 after 139 days on orbit.

Spacecraft

The Expedition 52 crew expanded to six. In the front row from left are the newest crew members Paolo Nespoli, Sergey Ryazanskiy and Randy Bresnik. In the back row are Peggy Whitson, Fyodor Yurchikhin and Jack Fischer.

Soyuz MS introduces following upgrades: more efficient solar panels, the new Kurs-NA approach and docking system, which has a mass of less than half that of its predecessor, additional micro-meteoroid debris shielding, a modified docking and attitude control engine – which will add redundancy during docking and deorbit burns, a main computer, TsVM-101, which has a mass (8.3 kg) of only one-eighth that of its Argon-16 predecessor (70 kg) and a smaller volume, a unified digital command/telemetry system that allows telemetry to be transmitted via Luch relay satellites for control of the spacecraft as well as to provide crew with positioning data when the spacecraft is out of range of ground tracking stations and upgraded GLONASS / GPS and COSPAS-SARSAT satellite systems to provide more accurate location services during search/rescue operations after landing.[4]

During the flight the spacecraft fulfills the following tasks: delivery of a visiting crew consisting of up to three persons and small accompanying cargoes, constant availability of the spacecraft, attached to the station during its crewed flight, in the standby mode to be ready for emergency descent of the main crew onto the ground in case of hazardous situation on the station, cosmonaut illness or injury, etc. (assured crew return vehicle function); planned descent of the visiting crew onto the ground, returning to the ground, together with the crew, payloads of relatively low mass and volume disposal of wastes from the station in the living compartment to be burned down in the atmosphere during descent.[4]

Crew

Position[5] Crew Member
Commander Russia Sergey Ryazansky, Roscosmos
Expedition 52
Second and last spaceflight
Flight Engineer 1 United States Randy Bresnik, NASA
Expedition 52
Second spaceflight
Flight Engineer 2 Italy Paolo Nespoli, ESA
Expedition 52
Third and last spaceflight

Backup crew

Position[6] Crew Member
Commander Russia Alexander Misurkin, Roscosmos
Flight Engineer 1 United States Mark T. Vande Hei, NASA
Flight Engineer 2 Japan Norishige Kanai, JAXA

References