2024 Russian crewed spaceflight to the ISS
Soyuz MS-26 Soyuz MS-26 approaches the International Space Station
Names ISS 72S Mission type ISS crew transportOperator Roscosmos COSPAR ID 2024-162A SATCAT no. 61043 Mission duration 71 days, 23 hours and 39 minutes (in progress) 180 days (planned)
Spacecraft Soyuz MS-26 No. 757 Spacecraft type Soyuz MS Manufacturer Energia Launch mass 7,050 kg (15,540 lb)[ 1]
Crew size 3 Members Callsign Burlak Expedition Expedition 71 /72
Launch date 11 September 2024, 16:23:12 (11 September 2024, 16:23:12 ) UTC (21:23:12 AQTT ) Rocket Soyuz 2.1a Launch site Baikonur , Site 31/6 Contractor Progress
Landing date March 2025 (planned) Landing site Kazakh Steppe , Kazakhstan
Reference system Geocentric orbit Regime Low Earth orbit Inclination 51.66°
Docking port Rassvet nadirDocking date 11 September 2024, 19:32 UTC Undocking date March 2025 (planned) Time docked 71 days, 20 hours and 30 minutes (in progress)
Mission patch, which depicts the three crew members as Burlak (the mission's callsign) pulling the Soyuz[ 2]
From left: Vagner , Ovchinin and Pettit
Soyuz MS-26 , Russian production No. 757 and identified by NASA as Soyuz 72S , is a Russian crewed Soyuz spaceflight launched from Site 31/6 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome on 11 September 2024 to the International Space Station .[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] The mission transported three crew members, Roscosmos cosmonauts Aleksey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner , along with NASA astronaut Donald Pettit .
When the spacecraft crossed the Karman line shortly after launch, there were a record 19 people in outer space: the three astronauts on the MS-26 mission, three more on China's Tiangong space station , four people on the SpaceX Polaris Dawn mission, and nine more on board the International Space Station.[ 6]
Crew
Soyuz MS-26 atop a Soyuz 2.1a rocket shortly after it was erected at Site 31/6 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome
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