From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2009 Russian crewed spaceflight to the ISS
The
Soyuz TMA-14
(
Russian
:
Союз ТМА-14
,
Union TMA-14
) was a
Soyuz
flight to the
International Space Station
, which launched on 26 March 2009. It transported two members of the
Expedition 19
crew as well as
spaceflight participant
Charles Simonyi
on his second self-funded flight to the space station. TMA-14 was the 101st crewed flight of a Soyuz spacecraft, including launch failures; however, it was the 100th to launch and land crewed, as
Soyuz 34
was launched uncrewed to replace
Soyuz 32
, which landed empty.
[2]
Crew
[
edit
]
Backup crew
[
edit
]
Mission highlights
[
edit
]
Soyuz TMA-14 was docked to the space station for the remainder of the
Expedition 20
increment to serve as an emergency escape vehicle. The spacecraft swapped its docking ports at the International Space Station from Zvezda SM aft port to Pirs DC nadir port on 2 July 2009.
[7]
This allowed
Progress 34P
to dock at the SM aft port on 29 July 2009.
Soyuz TMA-14 undocked and landed safely on 11 October 2009.
[8]
[9]
On board for the return flight was the space tourist
Guy Laliberte
. Laliberte was launched with
Expedition 21
on
Soyuz TMA-16
. He is the first Canadian space tourist.
Logo contest
[
edit
]
Roskosmos
, in cooperation with other nations' space programs, invited children ages 6 to 15 to design and submit a patch for Soyuz TMA-14 from October 25, 2008 through December 25, 2008. On December 29, 2008, Roscosmos hosted a ceremony to announce the winners. Anna Chibiskova, 12, from Moscow was chosen for first place and her artwork was incorporated into the design of the official Soyuz TMA-14 crew patch. Kaitlin Riley, 12, from New York, U.S., and Stanislav Pyatkin, 11, from Uglegorsk, Russia, were selected as the second and third-place winners respectively by TMA-14 crew mates Gennady Padalka and Michael Barrett. A fourth winner, Roma Kuznetsov, 7, from Kazakhstan, was further selected by Roscosmos director Anatoly Perimov. All four were invited to the launch of Soyuz TMA-14 with expenses paid by the Russian Insurance Center.
[10]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
McDowell, Jonathan.
"Satellite Catalog"
.
Jonathan's Space Page
. Retrieved
January 3,
2014
.
- ^
"The 100th Soyuz flight that (maybe) isn't"
. collectSPACE. October 10, 2008
. Retrieved
December 8,
2008
.
- ^
NASA (2008).
"NASA Assigns Crews for STS-127 and Expedition 19 Missions"
. NASA
. Retrieved
February 11,
2008
.
- ^
Space Adventures’ Orbital Spaceflight Candidate, Charles Simonyi, Plans Spring 2009 Return Flight to the ISS
Archived
October 4, 2008, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"Press Releases - Space Adventures"
.
www.spaceadventures.com
.
- ^
Жена главы компании Intel готовится стать космонавтом
Archived
February 14, 2012, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"ISS On-Orbit Status 06/10/09"
. NASA SOMD. June 10, 2009.
- ^
"Soyuz TMA-14"
. RSA. Archived from
the original
on July 16, 2011
. Retrieved
October 10,
2009
.
- ^
"Space station crew sails to safe landing in Kazakhstan"
. Spaceflight Now.
- ^
"Russian girl creates next Soyuz crew patch"
. collectSPACE. December 29, 2008
. Retrieved
December 30,
2008
.
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The † sign designates failed missions.
Italics
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Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
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