Kelly, Kornienko settle in for marathon mission
03/30/2015 04:15 PM Filed in: Space News | International Space Station
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
CBS News
Settling in aboard the International Space Station for a marathon 342-day stay in orbit, astronaut Scott Kelly says he's taking life in space "one day at a time," adding he plans to work at a slightly slower pace to maintain an even keel and keep his energy up as the days turn into weeks and the weeks into months.
Cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, who is joining Kelly for what NASA bills as the "One-Year Mission," said time tends to drag a bit on a long-duration flight, but he has no concerns about any potential psychological issues.
"The time flies a little slower here," Kornienko said in a NASA interview conducted Monday. "But as far as our psychological compatibility, we have been working really hard on the ground to work that out, and we have lots and lots of support. Our psychological success is a given. I'm very sure about our success, and I'm sure we will not have even a modicum of any psychological issues."
Kelly, Kornienko and Soyuz TMA-16M commander Gennady Padalka -- all three veterans of previous stays aboard the space station -- arrived at the lab complex Friday night, six hours after a sky-lighting launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. They were welcomed aboard by Expedition 43 commander Terry Virts, cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov and European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti.
"The ride to orbit was impressive as it always is," Kelly said in the NASA interview. "But once I got on board the space station, it really felt like I was visiting an old home, it felt very comfortable. But there is a lot of work to be done here, and the pace of work at times can be hectic. ... We've basically been working since we got here."
He said it will be important to maintain a manageable pace throughout the long flight and not to focus too much on upcoming events.
"Right now, I'm just kind of taking it day by day," he said, adding he plans to work at "maybe a little bit slower pace than I did last time (to keep) my energy level up so I have the appropriate reserves to deal with all these different major activities ... and, you know, respond if something happens that we have to work through the night or respond to some kind of emergency situation.
"I think a good life-work balance is important, and that's even more important in some cases on the space station."
Throughout their nearly yearlong stay in orbit, Kelly and Kornienko will participate in a wide variety of experiments to study the effects of prolonged weightlessness on the human body as well as the psychological impact of a long-duration stay in a confined space away from family and friends.
Four Russian cosmonauts logged flights aboard the Mir space station lasting between 366 to 438 days, but the last such mission ended in the 1990s. Using state-of-the-art instruments and protocols, Kelly and Kornienko hope to provide unprecedented data to help researchers mitigate any potentially harmful effects before eventual flights beyond low-Earth orbit.
"This is a really important step on our road to Mars," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden told Kelly during a videochat Monday. "We're excited about having you and Mikhail there as partners and excited about seeing all the things you're going to do."
John Holdren, the presidential science advisor and director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, congratulated Kelly on the successful launching.
"All of us wish you the best of luck in this unprecedented yearlong mission," he said. "We're watching you with enormous interest, not least because this mission is bringing us scientific information that only a prolonged stay on the International Space Station can provide ... as we work toward the president's goal of sending humans to Mars in the mid 2030s."
Kelly thanked Holdren for his interest, saying "I really appreciate the First Lady and the president's attention to NASA."
"The amount of work and science up here we can get done in all different kinds of disciplines ... is very important," Kelly said. "Hopefully, the current crews and previous crews and future crews, not just Misha (Kornienko) and myself, will be furthering our goals to put humans on Mars some day."
Along with collecting medical data, Kelly and Kornienko will be on board throughout the most significant space station reconfiguration since the shuttle's retirement in 2011.
Over the coming months, multiple station crews will work to equip the lab with docking adapters and other upgrades to permit new commercial crew ferry ships being built by Boeing and SpaceX to dock with the station starting in 2017. The new crew capsules will allow NASA to add an additional crew member, doubling the time available for science.
During their stay aboard the station, Kelly and Kornienko will serve with four crews, starting with Expedition 43. Virts, Shkaplerov and Cristoforetti plan to return to Earth in May aboard their Soyuz TMA-15M spacecraft, leaving Padalka in command of the Expedition 44 crew.
Three fresh crew members -- Soyuz TMA-17M commander Oleg Kononenko, NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren and Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui -- will join the ISS-44 crew at the end of May.
On Sept. 1, Soyuz TMA-18M commander Sergey Volkov will launch with two short-duration crew members: European space agency astronaut Andreas Mogenesen and British pop diva Sarah Brightman, the tenth "space tourist" to visit the lab and the first since 2009.
Volkov will remain aboard the station as part of the Expedition 45 crew, commanded by Kelly, but Brightman and Mogensen will return to Earth after a 10-day visit, along with Padalka, aboard the Soyuz TMA-16M spacecraft. At landing, Padalka will have logged 878 days in space during five missions, making him the most experienced spaceman in the world.
In November, Kononenko, Lindgren and Yui will come back to Earth, leaving Kelly, Kornienko and Volkov as the core members of Expedition 46. Later that month, Soyuz TMA-19M commander Yuri Malenchenko, NASA astronaut Timothy Kopra and ESA astronaut Tim Peake will join them, boosting the crew back to six.
Finally, on March 3, 2016, Volkov will bring Kelly and Kornienko back to Earth aboard the Soyuz TMA-18M spacecraft, closing out a marathon 342-day mission.
Throughout the "Year-long Mission," Kelly's twin brother, Mark, a four-flight shuttle veteran who is now retired from NASA, will participate in many of the same experiments on the ground, serving as a "control" to provide comparative data.
"This twin study is going to give us, hopefully, information on what we need to one day go to Mars," Mark Kelly told Bolden in the video conference. "We understand a lot about the engineering of a Mars flight, what it would take to get people there and get them back. But we don't understand a lot about the physiology."
The data are important, he said, "because if we are going to send people to Mars one day, it's not going to be a one-year flight. It'll probably be more than two years, and there's a lot to learn there."
"So I'm thankful to be part of this," he said. "I'm behind my brother Scott 100 percent as he spends a year in space. That's a big, big challenge that I know he didn't take lightly."
CBS News
Settling in aboard the International Space Station for a marathon 342-day stay in orbit, astronaut Scott Kelly says he's taking life in space "one day at a time," adding he plans to work at a slightly slower pace to maintain an even keel and keep his energy up as the days turn into weeks and the weeks into months.
Cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, who is joining Kelly for what NASA bills as the "One-Year Mission," said time tends to drag a bit on a long-duration flight, but he has no concerns about any potential psychological issues.
"The time flies a little slower here," Kornienko said in a NASA interview conducted Monday. "But as far as our psychological compatibility, we have been working really hard on the ground to work that out, and we have lots and lots of support. Our psychological success is a given. I'm very sure about our success, and I'm sure we will not have even a modicum of any psychological issues."
Astronaut Scott Kelly, left, and cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko reflect on the challenges of spending nearly a full year aboard the International Space Station. (Credit: NASA) |
Kelly, Kornienko and Soyuz TMA-16M commander Gennady Padalka -- all three veterans of previous stays aboard the space station -- arrived at the lab complex Friday night, six hours after a sky-lighting launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. They were welcomed aboard by Expedition 43 commander Terry Virts, cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov and European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti.
"The ride to orbit was impressive as it always is," Kelly said in the NASA interview. "But once I got on board the space station, it really felt like I was visiting an old home, it felt very comfortable. But there is a lot of work to be done here, and the pace of work at times can be hectic. ... We've basically been working since we got here."
He said it will be important to maintain a manageable pace throughout the long flight and not to focus too much on upcoming events.
"Right now, I'm just kind of taking it day by day," he said, adding he plans to work at "maybe a little bit slower pace than I did last time (to keep) my energy level up so I have the appropriate reserves to deal with all these different major activities ... and, you know, respond if something happens that we have to work through the night or respond to some kind of emergency situation.
"I think a good life-work balance is important, and that's even more important in some cases on the space station."
Throughout their nearly yearlong stay in orbit, Kelly and Kornienko will participate in a wide variety of experiments to study the effects of prolonged weightlessness on the human body as well as the psychological impact of a long-duration stay in a confined space away from family and friends.
Four Russian cosmonauts logged flights aboard the Mir space station lasting between 366 to 438 days, but the last such mission ended in the 1990s. Using state-of-the-art instruments and protocols, Kelly and Kornienko hope to provide unprecedented data to help researchers mitigate any potentially harmful effects before eventual flights beyond low-Earth orbit.
"This is a really important step on our road to Mars," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden told Kelly during a videochat Monday. "We're excited about having you and Mikhail there as partners and excited about seeing all the things you're going to do."
John Holdren, the presidential science advisor and director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, congratulated Kelly on the successful launching.
"All of us wish you the best of luck in this unprecedented yearlong mission," he said. "We're watching you with enormous interest, not least because this mission is bringing us scientific information that only a prolonged stay on the International Space Station can provide ... as we work toward the president's goal of sending humans to Mars in the mid 2030s."
Kelly thanked Holdren for his interest, saying "I really appreciate the First Lady and the president's attention to NASA."
"The amount of work and science up here we can get done in all different kinds of disciplines ... is very important," Kelly said. "Hopefully, the current crews and previous crews and future crews, not just Misha (Kornienko) and myself, will be furthering our goals to put humans on Mars some day."
Along with collecting medical data, Kelly and Kornienko will be on board throughout the most significant space station reconfiguration since the shuttle's retirement in 2011.
The Expedition 43 crew poses in the Destiny laboratory module after reviewing emergency procedures. Back row, left to right: Mikhail Kornienko, Anton Shkaplerov, Gennady Padalka and Scott Kelly. Front row: Samantha Cristoforetti and Expedition 43 commander Terry Virts. (Credit: NASA) |
Over the coming months, multiple station crews will work to equip the lab with docking adapters and other upgrades to permit new commercial crew ferry ships being built by Boeing and SpaceX to dock with the station starting in 2017. The new crew capsules will allow NASA to add an additional crew member, doubling the time available for science.
During their stay aboard the station, Kelly and Kornienko will serve with four crews, starting with Expedition 43. Virts, Shkaplerov and Cristoforetti plan to return to Earth in May aboard their Soyuz TMA-15M spacecraft, leaving Padalka in command of the Expedition 44 crew.
Three fresh crew members -- Soyuz TMA-17M commander Oleg Kononenko, NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren and Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui -- will join the ISS-44 crew at the end of May.
On Sept. 1, Soyuz TMA-18M commander Sergey Volkov will launch with two short-duration crew members: European space agency astronaut Andreas Mogenesen and British pop diva Sarah Brightman, the tenth "space tourist" to visit the lab and the first since 2009.
Volkov will remain aboard the station as part of the Expedition 45 crew, commanded by Kelly, but Brightman and Mogensen will return to Earth after a 10-day visit, along with Padalka, aboard the Soyuz TMA-16M spacecraft. At landing, Padalka will have logged 878 days in space during five missions, making him the most experienced spaceman in the world.
In November, Kononenko, Lindgren and Yui will come back to Earth, leaving Kelly, Kornienko and Volkov as the core members of Expedition 46. Later that month, Soyuz TMA-19M commander Yuri Malenchenko, NASA astronaut Timothy Kopra and ESA astronaut Tim Peake will join them, boosting the crew back to six.
Finally, on March 3, 2016, Volkov will bring Kelly and Kornienko back to Earth aboard the Soyuz TMA-18M spacecraft, closing out a marathon 342-day mission.
Throughout the "Year-long Mission," Kelly's twin brother, Mark, a four-flight shuttle veteran who is now retired from NASA, will participate in many of the same experiments on the ground, serving as a "control" to provide comparative data.
"This twin study is going to give us, hopefully, information on what we need to one day go to Mars," Mark Kelly told Bolden in the video conference. "We understand a lot about the engineering of a Mars flight, what it would take to get people there and get them back. But we don't understand a lot about the physiology."
The data are important, he said, "because if we are going to send people to Mars one day, it's not going to be a one-year flight. It'll probably be more than two years, and there's a lot to learn there."
"So I'm thankful to be part of this," he said. "I'm behind my brother Scott 100 percent as he spends a year in space. That's a big, big challenge that I know he didn't take lightly."