To: KantianBurke
And they would have been dead when the next shuttle got there.
765 posted on
02/03/2003 6:59:46 PM PST by
Howlin
To: Howlin
if you can determine that the answer to post 767 is in the negative then you are correct. Otherwise Columbia's seven astronaunts would be with their families right now.
768 posted on
02/03/2003 7:04:09 PM PST by
KantianBurke
(Who are YOU to legislate with my hard earned $$$??)
To: Howlin
Unless of course the Russians diverted this rocket with an emergency oxygen supply to orbit with the SS and the crew was able to retrieve oxygen cannisters
Soyuz Progress M-47 Launches to the Space Station
Marc Boucher
Sunday, February 02, 2003
As the world mourns the loss of the Columbia, the continuing mission of the International Space Station goes on as a Russian Soyuz cargo spaceship launched today with a regularly scheduled re-supply mission.
The purpose of this launch is to deliver cargo to the International Space Station (ISS). The shipment includes: fuel components, expendable equipment for scientific experiments, containers with food and parcels for the crew, sets of onboard documentation and scientific instruments for experiments at the ISS.
The M-47 Progress cargo spacecraft totals 7,290 kilogram in weight with a payload measured at 2,568 kilograms and was boosted by a mid-class Soyuz-U rocket.
The three member crew of the space station has enough supplies to last them through June. Since the shuttle fleet is now grounded the only way home for the crew at this time is by the Soyuz escape vehicle attached to the space station. If the shuttle is grounded for a longer period a new crew can be exchanged with the present one via a Soyuz launch. However a shuttle is required to help keep the space station in orbit. Every time the shuttle visits the space station it boosts the station into a higher orbit. If the shuttle can not boost the space station then it would eventually fall back to earth and burn up in the atmosphere.
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