• COVID-19 Affects Space Station Crew Transition

    From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Mon Mar 30 18:40:10 2020
    03/30/2020

    International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 62 crew is readying its Soyuz MS-15 vehicle for an April 17 departure back to Earth. Expedition 62 members are NASA Flight Engineer Jessica Meir; Flight Engineer Andrew Morgan, KI5AAA, and Commander Oleg Skripochka, RA0LDJ. The Expedition 63 crew members who are to replace them are nearing an April 9 launch aboard the Soyuz MS-16 vehicle.

    NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, KF5KDR, and Roscosmos cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin, and Ivan Vagner arrived this week at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for final training. The Expedition 63 trio is scheduled to live aboard the station for a little longer than 6 months, with Cassidy as commander. Because of travel limitations due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Cassidy's family will watch from home when he blasts off on April 9. Launch day at Baikonur is usually a festive affair.

    "But it'll be completely quiet," Cassidy said in a Spaceflight Now satellite interview[1] from Star City, Russia. "There won't be anybody there." A NASA protocol has long been in place to prevent astronauts from carrying disease microbes into space. All astronauts going to orbit must go through a 2-week "health stabilization" quarantine period. This way, NASA can make sure the crew is not incubating any illnesses before launch. NASA said it "will continue to evaluate and augment this plan, in coordination with its international and commercial partners," if needed.

    Russia's state space corporation Roscosmos has shut down all media activity surrounding the Soyuz launch, barring journalists from covering the mission in person. Russia will still live-stream the launch; NASA typically carries all of its crewed launches online via its NASA TV channel. The mid-April return of the Expedition 62 crew would typically involve a large number of recovery personnel.

    SpaceX will be ready to send its first crew of NASA astronauts to the ISS aboard its Crew Dragon capsule sometime in May. NASA has not said what might happen if those operations should change in light of the pandemic. - Thanks to AMSAT News Service


    [1] https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/03/20/astronauts-family-wont-attend-launch-next-month-due-to-coronavirus-threat/

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