Soyuz TMA-7

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Soyuz TMA-7
Союз ТМА-7
Mission statistics
Mission name: Soyuz TMA-7
Call sign:
Number of crew members: 3
Launch: October 1, 2005
03:55:00 UTC
Gagarin's Start
Landing: April 8, 2006
23:48:00 UTC
Duration: 189d 19h 53m
Number of orbits: 2,987

Soyuz TMA-7 (Russian: Союз ТМА-7) was a transport mission for portions of the International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 12 crew launched October 1, 2005. The flight delivered ISS Commander William McArthur and ISS Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev to the station to replace Expedition 11 crew members. Spaceflight Participant Gregory Olsen joined the TMA-7 crew for the ascent and docking with ISS, spent approximately eight days aboard the ISS conducting experiments, then returned to Earth with the outgoing members of Expedition 11 aboard Soyuz TMA-6. McArthur and Tokarev were joined on their return trip to Earth by Flight Engineer Marcos Pontes who launched aboard Soyuz TMA-8 and spent approximately seven days aboard ISS conducting experiments for the Brazilian Space Agency.

Contents

[edit] Crew

Launched:

Landed:

*Number in parentheses indicates number of spaceflights by each individual prior to and including this mission.

[edit] Mission parameters

[edit] Docking with ISS

[edit] Mission highlights

28th manned flight to ISS (Flight 11S).

Soyuz TMA-7 is a Soyuz spacecraft which has been launched on October 1, 2005 by a Soyuz launch vehicle from Baikonur Cosmodrome.

Soyuz TMA-7 approaches the International Space Station.
Soyuz TMA-7 approaches the International Space Station.

The spacecraft carried two members of the Expedition 12 crew to the International Space Station, together with the space tourist Gregory Olsen. They replaced the Expedition 11 crew, Commander Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips.

The last member of the original Expedition 12 crew, Thomas Reiter finally launched in July 2006 on STS-121. Owing to shuttle mechanical and weather delays, he was forced to move to Expedition 13.

This was the last flight which is covered by the 1996 "balance" agreement that required the Russians to provide 11 Soyuz spacecraft to ferry joint U.S-Russian crews to and from the International Space Station. Further Soyuz flights needed a renegotiation between NASA and its Russian counterpart, and a modification of the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000.

[edit] See also

Soyuz manned flights
Previous mission:
Soyuz TMA-6
Soyuz TMA-7
Next mission:
Soyuz TMA-8
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