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LIVE: Soyuz TMA-22 Landing Coverage
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 04:44
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#1
by
John44
on 27 Apr, 2012 06:48
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#2
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 08:24
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I don't see anyone providing coverage. So:
Undocking was on time 3:18 CT (8:18GMT).
Now into the separation burn. And a nice view of the ATV.
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#3
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 08:31
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333ft away.
Deorbit burn at 5:49 CT if I heard correctly.
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#4
by
JJ..
on 27 Apr, 2012 08:44
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I got 3 grabs from a pretty bad stream here
It Looked Awesome as the ATV-3 came into view
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#5
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 08:48
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Nice screenies, Was getting ready to capture on the ISS feed, but when KU came back the Soyuz was just heading into darkness.. Typical.
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#6
by
John44
on 27 Apr, 2012 09:08
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#7
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:03
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#8
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:13
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Thanks guys, just got back in, so split the thread for re-entry/landing coverage.
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#9
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:26
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#10
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:31
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Keep an eye on it please Aaron, just getting Pete's article set up.
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#11
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:34
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8 Helicopters at the landing site, 2 at the Ballistic landing site, and 2 inbetween.
Love Russian vehicles, Their looks are rather.. unique.
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#12
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:37
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NASA just replaying earlier activities as we get towards the de-orbit burn set for 6:49 Eastern, Just over 10 minutes away.
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#13
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:44
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De-orbit burn will last 4m 18s.
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#14
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:47
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Few minutes to the deorbit burn.
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#15
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:47
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#16
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:49
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#17
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:50
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Into the deorbit burn. Notes of "clarity errors" on the loops. PAO talking over the calls....clearly not an issue.
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#18
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:54
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#19
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:55
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MCC-H happy with the burn.
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#20
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:57
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Under 50 minutes to landing.
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#21
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:57
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20 minutes to the sep of the modules.
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#22
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 10:58
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Brandi notes they won't get as much comms as the ISS is in a high altitude.
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#23
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:03
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15 mins to module sep.
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#24
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:04
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#25
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:09
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10 mins to the module sep.
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#26
by
Ronsmytheiii
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:10
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#27
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:15
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Some of the Commodore 64 graphics they have of entry.
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#28
by
Spiff
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:16
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Over the Sahara. 30 mins to landing. 2 mins to module separation
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#29
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:16
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#30
by
brahmanknight
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:16
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Thanks for that link, Ron!
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#31
by
Galactic Penguin SST
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:19
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Separation of the modules.
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#32
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:19
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#33
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:21
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#34
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:21
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#35
by
Ronsmytheiii
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:26
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#36
by
Ronsmytheiii
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:28
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#37
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:30
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#38
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:31
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Waiting for drogue chute.
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#39
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:31
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The search and rescue fleet
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#40
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:31
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#41
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:32
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#42
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:33
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Drogue deployed and nominal landing location is on track.
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#43
by
woods170
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:33
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Some of the Commodore 64 graphics they have of entry.

This is spaceflight Chris, not Hollywood.
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#44
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:33
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#45
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:34
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On to the main parachute. 16,000 feet.
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#46
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:35
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#47
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:35
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#48
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:35
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Comms established with ground crews.
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#49
by
Spiff
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:36
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Woohoo! Visual!
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#50
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:36
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Talking about being hungry
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#51
by
Satori
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:36
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Amazing! Great images!!! They're back!!!!
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#52
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:36
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#53
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:36
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Nice to see landing this time.
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#54
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:37
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"Anatoly, you must be really hungry by now. Hope you're not dying."
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#55
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:38
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15 mph descent rate.
Heatshield has been jettisoned (earlier).
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#56
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:38
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Seat shock absorbers turned up.
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#57
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:38
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Seven minutes to landing.
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#58
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:39
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Amazing how the ground can already see them but they still have 8 minutes to go.
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#59
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:39
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#60
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:40
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#61
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:40
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#62
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:42
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Getting swayed around a bit by the wind.
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#63
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:43
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#64
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:43
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2000 feet to go.
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#65
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:44
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I shall pray for no cars to be in the view of touch down like last time.
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#66
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:45
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#67
by
woods170
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:45
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I shall pray for no cars to be in the view of touch down like last time. 
Do helicopters count?
Never mind. This time only slowly sloping landscape in view. Oh well...
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#68
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:45
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#69
by
asmi
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:45
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I shall pray for no cars to be in the view of touch down like last time. 
LOL - that's what I was thinking about too
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#70
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:46
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ЕСТЬ ПОСАДКА!
welcome home TMA-22!
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#71
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:46
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#72
by
Spiff
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:46
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#73
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:47
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#74
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:47
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#75
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:47
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#76
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:47
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#77
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:50
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Right, if anyone wants to grab some shots of the crew coming out, I'd appreciate it as I've got to go set up Enterprise's Ferry article and coverage.
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#78
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:51
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Right, if anyone wants to grab some shots of the crew coming out, I'd appreciate it as I've got to go set up Enterprise's Ferry article and coverage.
Consider it done. I'll be snapping images until the coverage ends.
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#79
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:54
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These guys were left behind.
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#80
by
Ronsmytheiii
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:55
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#81
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:56
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#82
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:56
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#83
by
Rocket Science
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:57
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Welcome home!
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#84
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 11:59
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#85
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:04
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#86
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:04
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Rob Navias there again!
(And this guy is clearly the boss!)
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#87
by
Mapperuo
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:05
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#88
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:07
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#89
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:09
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#90
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:09
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Anatolyi is out next with a broad smile
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#91
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:10
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No, Chris, this is the boss
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#92
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:12
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And finally, Dan Burbank.
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#93
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:12
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#94
by
Cbased
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:16
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#95
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:17
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This looked like they're taking a group photo.
And then they got carried away into the medical tent.
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#96
by
d3jf
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:21
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#97
by
Chris Bergin
on 27 Apr, 2012 12:33
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Great work David, thanks a lot!
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#98
by
John44
on 27 Apr, 2012 13:15
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#99
by
jacqmans
on 27 Apr, 2012 14:13
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RELEASE: 12-140
SPACE STATION TRIO LANDS SAFELY IN KAZAKHSTAN
HOUSTON -- Three members of the Expedition 30 crew undocked from the
International Space Station and safely returned to Earth on Friday,
wrapping up a five-and-a-half-month mission in space.
Commander Dan Burbank of NASA and Russian Flight Engineers Anatoly
Ivanishin and Anton Shkaplerov landed their Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft
in Kazakhstan at 6:45 a.m. CDT after undocking from the space
station's Poisk module at 3:18 a.m. The trio, which arrived at the
station on Nov. 16, 2011, spent a total of 165 days in space, 163 of
them conducting research on the station.
Before leaving the station, Burbank handed over command of Expedition
31 to the Russian Federal Space Agency's Oleg Kononenko, who remains
aboard the station with NASA astronaut Don Pettit and European Space
Agency astronaut Andre Kuipers. They will be joined by NASA astronaut
Joseph Acaba and Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin.
Acaba, Padalka and Revin are scheduled to launch May 14 from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and dock with the station on May
16.
To follow Twitter updates from NASA's Expedition 30 and 31 astronauts,
visit:
http://twitter.com/AstroCoastiehttps://twitter.com/astro_Pettithttps://twitter.com/AstroAcabaFor more information about Expedition 31 and the space station, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/station
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#100
by
asmi
on 27 Apr, 2012 22:09
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Expedition 30 - Soyuz TMA-22 Undocking
http://www.space-multimedia.nl.eu.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7521
Love this chatter (translating from Russian):
@4:00:
- "So, next stop is Planet Earth"
- "I want to hope so"
- "We will be watching you, worrying about you"
- "Please don't feel lonely"
@5:45
- "So, are we going to wave them with the wings?"
- "We've gotta be careful not to tear them off"

...And so forth - too bad NTV does not translate all of that
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#101
by
jacqmans
on 07 May, 2012 19:58
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MEDIA ADVISORY: M12-080
ASTRONAUT DAN BURBANK RETURNS TO EARTH, AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEWS
HOUSTON -- Just back from his command of the International Space
Station, NASA astronaut Dan Burbank will be available for live
satellite interviews from 6-7 a.m. CDT on Thursday, May 10.
During his third space flight, Burbank completed 165 days in space as
a member of the Expedition 29 and 30 crews. He has performed one
spacewalk and spent 189 days in space.
Burbank and his crewmates, Expedition 30 Flight Engineers Anton
Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin of the Russian Federal Space Agency,
returned to Earth in their Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft at 6:45 a.m. on
April 27. The crew members spent the majority of their time aboard
the complex performing science experiments and routine maintenance.
Burbank is a native of Yarmouthport, Mass., and a 1985 graduate of the
United States Coast Guard Academy. After earning his commission,
Burbank served in various roles as a Coast Guard officer before NASA
selected him as an astronaut in 1996. He received a master of science
degree from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 1990.
To arrange an interview, news media representatives must contact Karen
Svetaka at 281-483-8684 or
[email protected] by 1 p.m. on
Wednesday, May. 9.
The interviews will be preceded by a feed of video b-roll material of
Burbank and his mission at 5:30 a.m. The NASA Live Interview Media
Service (LIMS) satellite will be used for the interviews. LIMS
satellite parameters will be provided by NASA to confirmed clients.
For NASA Television streaming video, downlink and scheduling
information, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/ntvFor Burbank's complete biography, visit:
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/burbank.htmlFor more information about the International Space Station, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/station
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#102
by
Lewis007
on 08 May, 2012 06:43
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The Russian members of the crew (Shkaplerov and Ivanishin) have already talked with journalists about their spaceflight.
A transcript (in Russian) of the May 2 press conference can be found here:
http://www.gctc.ru/main.php?id=1422
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#103
by
Lewis007
on 01 Jan, 2014 13:56
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