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Rollout of Soyuz rocket that will take UAE astronaut to space

It's the same launch site where Russian cosmonaut Gagarin blasted off to space in 1961



Hazza Al Mansouri
Image Credit: WAM

Baikonur, Kazakhstan: The Soyuz launch vehicle that will transport the UAE’s first astronaut Hazzaa AlMansoori to the International Space Station (ISS) on Wednesday, September 25, has been lifted by a crane to position, ready for launch.

Checks will be done and it will then be fuelled up. Earlier on Monday, the Soyuz rocket was rolled out on a rail car.

Here's what happened today:

10.38 am local (9.38 am UAE)

Service tower lifted up and secured around the rocket.

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10.25am local time (9.25 am UAE)

The crane has now come down, and the powerbelt is securely holding the Soyuz MS-15

9.45 am local (8.15am UAE)

The first phase of the installation took 10 minutes, in which it is lifted into position.

These service towers help engineers to go around the rocket and do further tests and improvements before the launch.

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7.46am (6.46 am UAE)

The rocket has reached the launch pad.
Image Credit: Janice Ponce de Leon/Gulf News

Rocket reaches launch pad. It was moved from an assembly building in Baikonur Cosmodrome to launch pad No. 1.

6.46am (5.46 am UAE)

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Soyuz rocket rolls out of assembly building.

The Soyuz launch Vehicle is now being rolled out of the assembly building (6.46am)
Image Credit: Janice Ponce de Leon/Gulf News

This is the 144th flight of the Soyuz spacecraft and it will transport the three members of Expedition 61 to the International Space Station.

It was moved from an assembly building in Baikonur Cosmodrome to launch pad No. 1.

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The Soyuz rocket rolls to the launch pad on Monday, September 23, 2019, at Baikonur. The livery on the rocket shows UAE, Russian and US flags, along with the logo of the Mohamed Bin Rashid Space Centre.
Image Credit: Janice Ponce De Leon

Baikonur Cosmodrome launch pad No. 1 is the same launch site where Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin blasted off to space onboard the Vostok 1 spacecraft, becoming the first man in space on April 12, 1961.

Officials, members of the media, and crowds gathered outside the assembly building before sunrise to witness the roll out.

As per tradition since the first rollout in the 1960s, the Soyuz rocket is being rolled out shortly after sunrise.

As per tradition the spacecraft launcher is being rolled out in the early hours of the morning, just after sunrise
Image Credit: Janice Ponce de Leon/Gulf News
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Salem Al Merri, Assistant Director General of the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre, said: “We’re excited about the launch. They (cosmonaut and astronauts) are in great condition. A meeting was held for minor adjustments in the schedule. But so far, it’s all systems go.”

Salem Al Merri, Assistant Director-General of MBRSC and head of the UAE Astronaut Programme, during the roll-out of the Soyuz launch vehicle on Monday.
Image Credit: Janice Ponce de Leon / Gulf News

Flight plans

In command of the Soyuz spacecraft on the Wednesday flight is Russian commander Oleg Skripochka.

Nasa astronaut Jessica Meir is Flight Engineer 1 while Hazzaa will be Flight Engineer 2.

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Reliable vehicle

The Soyuz-FG rocket and the Soyuz MS crew vehicle are Roscosmos’ veteran launchers.

The 50-metre-long Soyuz rocket is roughly the height of a 13-storey commercial building. It has a liftoff mass of between 310 and 313 tonnes.
Image Credit: Janice Ponce De Leon / Gulf News

They are the longest operating spacecraft programme in the history of space exploration.

Since 2011, the Soyuz rocket family has been the only system capable of sending humans to the ISS since the US’ Space Shuttle Programme was shut down.

The Soyuz-FG rocket rolls from the assembly building to the launchpad on rail.
Image Credit: Janice Ponce De Leon / Gulf News

The 50-metre-long Soyuz rocket is roughly the height of a 13-storey commercial building. It has a liftoff mass of between 310 and 313 tonnes.

At the Cosmonaut Hotel crew quarters in Baikonur, Kazakhstan.
Image Credit:

It’s a three-stage rocket that provides three stages of thrust using liquid oxygen and kerosene as propellants at various points into the flight.

K9 team inspecting the tracks.

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