Progress MS-7
Progress MS-7 (Прогресс МС-7) | |||
Beställare | Roskosmos | ||
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Tillverkare | RSC Energia | ||
Modell | Progress MS | ||
Operatör | Roskosmos | ||
Färdens tid | 194 dag | ||
NSSDC-ID | 2017-065A[1] | ||
Uppskjutning | |||
Startplats | Bajkonur 31/6 | ||
Raket | Sojuz-2.1a | ||
Uppskjutning | 14 oktober 2017, 08:47 UTC | ||
Återinträde | |||
Återinträde | 26 april 2018 | ||
Omloppsbana | |||
Banlutning | 51,6° | ||
Dockning | |||
Rymdstation | ISS | ||
Dockning | 16 oktober 2017, 11:04:07 UTC | ||
Dockningsport | Pirs, nadir | ||
Ur dockning | 28 mars 2018, 13:50:30 UTC | ||
Tid dockad | 163 dag | ||
Kronologi | |||
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Progress MS-7 (ryska: Прогресс МС-7) eller som NASA kallar den, Progress 68 eller 68P, är en rysk obemannad rymdfarkost som levererat förnödenheter, syre, vatten och bränsle till Internationella rymdstationen (ISS). Farkosten sköts upp med en Sojuz-2.1a-raket, den 14 oktober 2017, från Kosmodromen i Bajkonur. Den dockade med rymdstationen den 16 oktober 2017.
Den lämnade rymdstationen den 28 mars 2018och brann som planerat upp i jordens atmosfär den 26 april 2018.
12 oktober
Den 12 oktober 2017 avbröts förberedelserna bara sekunder före den planerade uppskjutningen. Hade farkosten skjutits upp den 12 oktober, hade den dockat med rymdstationen drygt tre timmar efter uppskjutningen[2].
Källor
Fotnoter
- ^ ”NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive” (på engelska). NASA. https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=2017-065A. Läst 1 mars 2020.
- ^ ”Progress supply ship completes space station delivery” (på engelska). sid. spaceflightnow. Arkiverad från originalet den 17 oktober 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191017171516/https://spaceflightnow.com/2017/10/16/progress-supply-ship-completes-space-station-delivery/. Läst 16 oktober 2017.
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Media som används på denna webbplats
ISS Progress cargo spacecraft (NASA)
An unpiloted Progress 11 supply vehicle departs from the Pirs Docking Compartment on the International Space Station (ISS) at 2:42 p.m. (CDT) on September 4, 2003 for another month alone in orbit, as part of a Russian scientific experiment. It will then be deorbited with its load of trash and unneeded equipment and burn in the Earth's atmosphere.
A Progress supply ship linked up to the orbiting International Space Station (ISS) at 3:48 GMT, November 18, bringing Expedition 1 commander William M. Shepherd, pilot Yuri P.
Gidzenko and flight engineer Sergei K. Krikalev two tons of food, clothing, hardware and holiday gifts from their families. The photograph was taken with a 35mm camera and the film was later handed over to the STS-97 crew members
for return to Earth and subsequent processing.Backdropped by a cloud-covered part of Earth, the Orbital Sciences' Cygnus cargo craft approaches the International Space Station, photographed by an Expedition 40 crew member. The two spacecraft converged at 6:36 a.m. (EDT) on July 16, 2014.
ISS021-E-017623 (30 Oct. 2009) --- Backdropped by a cloud-covered part of Earth, the unpiloted Japanese H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV), filled with trash and unneeded items, departs from the International Space Station. European Space Agency astronaut Frank De Winne, Expedition 21 commander; NASA astronaut Nicole Stott and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Robert Thirsk, both flight engineers, used the station's Canadarm2 robotic arm to grab the HTV cargo craft and unberth it from the Harmony node's nadir port. The HTV was successfully unberthed at 10:18 a.m. (CDT) on Oct. 30, 2009, and released from the station's Canadarm2 at 12:32 p.m.
This image, photographed by one of the Expedition 42 crew members aboard the International Space Station, shows the SpaceX Dragon cargo craft approaching on Jan. 12 2015 for its grapple and berthing and the start of a month attached to the complex. Dragon carried more than 2 ½ tons of supplies and experiments to the station.
ISS026-E-037172 (24 Feb. 2011) --- Surrounded by the blackness of space, the European Space Agency's "Johannes Kepler" Automated Transfer Vehicle-2 (ATV-2) approaches the International Space Station. Docking of the two spacecraft occurred at 10:59 a.m. (EST) on Feb. 24, 2011.