Tim Peake about to become first British astronaut on ISS

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The rocket that will carry UK astronaut Tim Peake into orbit has arrived at the launch pad in Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

At 01:00 GMT (07:00 local time), the Soyuz launcher was rolled out on its flat-bed transporter for the 2km train journey to the pad.

The train took almost two hours to reach the pad, known as Site No 1.

Mr Peake - who will be the first British astronaut to visit the ISS and the first UK Government-backed astronaut - will be accompanied by American Tim Kopra and Russian Yuri Malenchenko on Tuesday's flight to the International Space Station (ISS).

It should take the astronauts about six hours to reach the orbiting outpost, where they will dock and join the crew of three already stationed there.

Astronauts' relatives, members of the back-up crew, space agency officials and journalists were among the visitors gathered to see the rocket rolled out of its hangar and lifted to the vertical position at the launch site where Yuri Gagarin became the first human to blast into space in 1961.

The UK government had traditionally been opposed to financing activities associated with human spaceflight. So previous British spacefarers, such as Helen Sharman, the first Briton in space, who flew to Mir in 1991, were required to seek alternative forms of funding.

Previous "Brits in space" have either had US or dual citizenship and worked for the American space agency Nasa, or been on privately funded or sponsored trips.

The Government has announced plans to make the UK the European hub for commercial space flight and space technologies, with investments in space flight and microgravity research that will give an £11.8 billion boost to the economy.

Business Secretary Sajid Javid said: "For decades mankind has dreamt of space travel and the final frontier, and from today the UK will trigger the next scientific and innovation revolution to turn science fiction into science fact.

"Not only are we celebrating the launch of the first UK Government-backed astronaut, but our first ever space policy will build on the inspiration he provides to grow our burgeoning space industry.

"Historically we haven't been a major player in space programmes. This policy will change that."


Tim Peake: Rocket rolled to launch pad

By Paul Rincon
Science editor, BBC News website, Baikonur
13 December 2015


The rocket is now ready to be fuelled with 300 tonnes of propellant

The rocket that will carry UK astronaut Tim Peake into orbit has arrived at the launch pad in Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

At 01:00 GMT (07:00 local time), the Soyuz launcher was rolled out on its flat-bed transporter for the 2km train journey to the pad.

The train took almost two hours to reach the pad, known as Site No 1.

Mr Peake will be accompanied by American Tim Kopra and Russian Yuri Malenchenko on Tuesday's flight to the International Space Station (ISS).

It should take the astronauts about six hours to reach the orbiting outpost, where they will dock and join the crew of three already stationed there.

Astronauts' relatives, members of the back-up crew, space agency officials and journalists were among the visitors gathered to see the rocket rolled out of its hangar and lifted to the vertical position at the launch site where Yuri Gagarin became the first human to blast into space in 1961.

Among them were Tim Peake's parents, Angela and Nigel.

Angela Peake told BBC News it was "fantastic" to be at Baikonur for her son's launch, adding she was immensely proud of him.

Nigel Peake said: "[Tim] is raring to go now. He's trained, he's ready, he's happy. They're all together and just waiting for the big lift-off."

He added he was "a bit over-awed" at the "scale of the operation".


At 07:00 local time, the rocket emerged from the huge assembly facility known as Site 112

German-born Alexander Gerst, who was one of the other five European Space Agency (Esa) astronauts selected along with Mr Peake in 2009, told me: "I met Tim yesterday, he's in very good spirits, and he's looking forward to it."

Mr Gerst, who flew to the ISS in 2014, added: "It's going to be an amazing ride for him - I'm jealous! He really deserves his flight, but I told him: 'If you have another seat up there in the spaceship I'll come with you."

It was a bitterly cold morning here at Baikonur Cosmodrome, as a diesel locomotive was backed up to the door of the giant hangar-like facility known as Building 112, in readiness to haul the rocket along a railway track to its destination.

As the shutters lifted in the darkness, revealing the building's illuminated interior, there was excitement as the crowd glimpsed the red nozzles and polished metal of the Soyuz rocket's "business end". The locomotive sounded its whistle and sped past us, with the launcher and its transporter in tow.

We then decamped to a railway crossing, trudging across the hard-frozen ground to watch the last leg of this carefully choreographed performance as the launcher advanced down the final stretch of track to the launch site known informally as Gagarin's Start.

Once it arrived, the rocket was to be raised up and encased within the arms of its service structure.


The train took one hour 45 minutes to haul the launcher to the pad


Crowds gathered at a crossroads to watch the rocket make its final approach to the launch pad


Here to see the rocket arrive was David Willetts, the former UK science minister, who is regarded by many as the architect behind Tim Peake's mission to the ISS.

I asked him what it was like to see the plans come to fruition.

"It's incredibly exciting. It's been a long journey from those negotiations with the European Space Agency in 2012. That's when I changed the policy and we moved into participating in manned missions. The fact he's going to do some great science while he's up there has justified that decision."

The UK government had traditionally been opposed to financing activities associated with human spaceflight. So previous British spacefarers, such as Helen Sharman, the first Briton in space, who flew to Mir in 1991, were required to seek alternative forms of funding.

Mr Peake was selected by ESA from a pool of 8,000 applicants in 2009 but, explained Mr Willetts, "he was on the training programme, but was not part of the manned flight programme".



He added: "Sadly he was very unlikely to get a flight up to the space station, because Britain was not participating in the ISS."

"The sheer excitement of having the first official British astronaut reminds people that we are a leading scientific power. We can do this type of thing, we can participate in space and we have a great space industry."


The rocket was raised into the vertical position at the pad - known informally as Gagarin's Start

The mission's commander, Yuri Malenchenko, is one of the Russian Space Agency's (Roscosmos) most experienced cosmonauts. He has spent a total of 641 days in space, over five flights.

This will be the second flight for Timothy Kopra, who spent 60 days aboard the ISS in 2009. The US Army colonel was subsequently assigned to the final mission of space shuttle Discovery in 2011, but was replaced after being injured in a bike accident.

Bill Gersternmaier, Nasa's chief of ISS operations, told me: "We've called it the Tim And Tim mission… It's interesting to see people from other countries getting excited about their astronauts flying."

"It will be great to have six crew back on orbit, getting ready to keep doing the research on board the space station."

On the topic of the space station's longevity he said: "We're working until 2024 on the ISS. The Russians have indicated that [date]. The Japanese are also in the process of approving it and so has ESA.

"We look at that as nine more years where we'll have lots of productive research. We're starting to see lots of interest from companies - not just aerospace companies - who want to do research in space."

Tim Peake: Rocket rolled to launch pad - BBC News

UK to be European space flight hub: Tim Peake to be sent to ISS as UK space policy launche | Science | News | Daily Express
 
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Millions of Britons, including Prime Minister David Cameron, gathered nervously but excitedly around their TV sets earlier today to watch Major Tim Peake become Britain's first official astronaut and the first Briton to go to the International Space Station. The blast-off was shown live on BBC News 24, Sky News, BBC Two and on a special episode of BBC One's Stargazing Live, presented by Professor Brian Cox and Dara O Briain.

Esa astronaut Major Peake is not the first British astronaut to have flown in space, but he is the first British-government backed astronaut and the first to have not had private funding or taken dual citizenship.

Alongside Soyuz Commander Yuri Malenchenko and Nasa's flight engineer Tim Kopra, Peake took off at 11.03 GMT from Baikonur, Kazakhstan on board a Soyuz TMA-19 rocket.

The married father of two, 43, from Chichester, West Sussex, has spent six years in training for the mission, which will see him spend six months aboard the ISS – an orbiting laboratory that speeds through space at 17,500mph some 248 miles above Earth.

Last night, he enjoyed a massage and watched a film as he spent one final evening relaxing prior to his historic space flight.

Major Peake, a former Army helicopter pilot, is on his way to the ISS in a module the size of a van, which sits on top of a Soviet rocket based on a 1950s ballistic missile.

It took off from launch pad one at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan – the very spot where Yuri Gagarin lifted off from in 1961 to become the first man in space.

Its awesome thrust is powering Major Peake and his companions to more than 1,000mph (1,609km/h).

It reached orbit in a little under ten minutes. However, it will take another six hours to catch up with the space station.

After the successful blast-off, Major Peake, who is fast on his way to becoming a new British national hero, gave a big smile, a wave and a thumbs-up to the camera filming him inside the cockpit.

He is part of Esa's Principia mission, for which he will conduct a number of experiments on board the ISS - as well as "run" the London Marathon.

We have lift-off! British astronaut Major Tim Peake gives the thumbs up as he heads towards the International Space Station for start of historic six-month odyssey


Britain's first official astronaut Major Tim Peake left for International Space Station at 11.03am GMT today

After spending six years in training, the father of two will endure six months in orbit some 248 miles above Earth

He is joined by Soyuz Commander Yuri Malenchenko from Roscosmos and Nasa's flight engineer Tim Kopra

Major Peake bid an emotional farewell to family earlier today as he left the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan


By Victoria Woollaston and Richard Gray and Emma Glanfield for MailOnline and Fiona Macrae Science Editor For The Daily Mail
15 December 2015
Daily Mail

Major Tim Peake has made space history by becoming the first official British astronaut to blast off to the International Space Station.

Major Peake, alongside Soyuz Commander Yuri Malenchenko and Nasa's flight engineer Tim Kopra took off at 11.03 GMT from Baikonur, Kazakhstan on board a Soyuz TMA-19 rocket.

The married father of two, from Chichester, West Sussex, has spent six years in training for the mission, which will see him spend six months aboard the ISS – an orbiting laboratory that speeds through space at 17,500mph some 248 miles above Earth.


Major Tim Peake has made space history by being the first British astronaut to blast off to the International Space Station (pictured left). Major Peake, alongside Soyuz Commander Yuri Malenchenko and Nasa's flight engineer Tim Kopra (pictured right) took off at 11.03 GMT from Baikonur, Kazakhstan on board a Soyuz TMA-19 rocket


Major Peake, a former Army helicopter pilot, is on his way to the ISS in a module the size of a van, which sits on top of a Soviet rocket based on a 1950s ballistic missile. He is pictured inside the capsule giving a 'thumbs up' to the on-board camera as the curvature of the Earth can be seen through the window




The rocket took off from launch pad one at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan – the same spot where Yuri Gagarin lifted off from in 1961 to become the first man in space. Its awesome thrust is powering Major Peake and his companions to more than 1,000mph (1,609km/h) towards the International Space Station


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=bEuCyczF5bE



Thumbs-up from Major Peake:


Last night, he enjoyed a massage and watched a film as he spent one final evening relaxing prior to his historic space flight.

Major Peake, a former Army helicopter pilot, is on his way to the ISS in a module the size of a van, which sits on top of a Soviet rocket based on a 1950s ballistic missile.

It took off from launch pad one at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan – the very spot where Yuri Gagarin lifted off from in 1961 to become the first man in space.

Its awesome thrust is powering Major Peake and his companions to more than 1,000mph (1,609km/h).

It reached orbit in a little under ten minutes. However, it will take another six hours to catch up with the space station.

TIMELINE TO TOUCHDOWN: MAJOR TIM PEAKE'S JOURNEY TO THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION

Pre launch sequence
10:56:10:07 Pre-launch operations complete
10:57:10:06 Launch countdown operations to auto; vehicle ready
10:58:10:05 Commander's controls activated
10:59:10:04 Combustion chamber nitrogen purge
10:00:10:03 Propellant drainback
11:00:14:02:56 Space Station flies over Baikonur
11:00:25:02:45 Booster propellant tank pressurisation
11:01:40:01:30 Ground propellant feed terminated
11:02:10:01:00 Vehicle to internal power
11:02:35 :00:35 First umbilical tower separates

Auto sequence start
11:02:40:00:30 Ground umbilical to third stage disconnected
11:02:55:00:15 Second umbilical tower separates
11:02:58:00:12 Launch command issued

Engine start sequence begins

11:03:10 :00:10 Engine turbopumps at flight speed
11:03:05:00:05 Engines at maximum thrust
11:03:10:00:00 LAUNCH OF SOYUZ TMA-19M
11:11:55 +8:45 Third stage shutdown and orbital insertion
Leak check and launch pad
11:13 Soyuz spacecraft separates and is flying free
15:15 Rendezvous with International Space Station begins
17:00 ESA TV docking coverage begins
17:24 Docking
17:37 Docking hooks close
17:40 Pressure-check for leaks
18:45 ESA TV hatch opening coverage begins
19:25 Hatches open for greetings and safety briefing
19:10 Press conference and talk with family

*All times are in GMT



Photographers take pictures as Russia's Soyuz TMA-19M spacecraft carrying the International Space Station Expedition 46/47 crew lifts off




Esa engineers described the successful launch as 'flawless' and praised the work of the on-board team. The Soyuz spacecraft (top) separated and began flying free (bottom) at 11:13GMT


Major Tim Peake became Britain's first official astronaut today and should step on to the International Space Station at around 7.25pm GMT to begin his six-month stay after his Russian rocket departed for space at exactly 11.03am GMT. After boarding the bus to the launch pad in his space suit, Tim Peake created a heart with his hands and gestured towards his son Oliver (pictured)


Tim Peake is pictured left, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko is pictured centre and American astronaut Tim Kopra is pictured right on the way to the launch pad in Baikonur. The trio have been training for the mission for the past six years

Docking will occur at 5.24pm GMT and, following more than 90 minutes of meticulous checks that the seal between the two vehicles is airtight, the hatch will open, allowing Major Peake to join the three astronauts already aboard the ISS.

He is due to step on to the space station at 7.25pm GMT tonight.

Minutes after the 'flawless' launch, Prime Minister David Cameron posted a video message to Major Peake.

He said: 'Tim, I know you have been dreaming of this day for a long time and we will be with you for every step of the way, watching with admiration and wonder.

'So on behalf of everyone in Britain let me wish you the very best of luck. You are doing us all proud.'


Minutes after the 'flawless' launch, Prime Minister David Cameron posted a video message to Major Peake. He said: 'Tim, I know you have been dreaming of this day for a long time and we will be with you for every step of the way, watching with admiration and wonder. 'So on behalf of everyone in Britain let me wish you the very best of luck. You are doing us all proud.' He also tweeted this image


During the last six years, Major Peake (pictured in his space suit ahead of the launch) has lived in an underground cave, spent 12 days on the bottom of the sea, and taken lessons in science and Russian in preparation for the trip of a lifetime




Major Peake posted this 'thumbs up' selfie in his final tweet (pictured left) before leaving the Cosmonaut hotel this morning. He thanked his followers for their good luck messages and 'phenomenal support'. Expedition 46 Soyuz Commander Yuri Malenchenko is pictured top right, above flight engineer Tim Kopra and Esa's Tim Peake as they wave farewell prior to boarding the Soyuz TMA-19M rocket


The father of two is pictured waving goodbye to friends and family from a bus before donning his space suit at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. His youngest son Oliver, four, who was sitting on the shoulders of his grandfather, Tim's father-in-law, cried loudly as he waved to his father while sobbing: 'I want to go with Daddy'


The British astronaut was still beaming as his space suit was tested ahead of the launch. He was selected as an Esa astronaut in May 2009 from a pool of more than 8,000 applicants and completed his Astronaut Basic Training in November 2010

MAJOR PEAKE: JOURNEY TO SPACE

2008: Applied to the European Space Agency. Start of rigorous, year-long screening process
2009: Selected to join the European Space Agency Astronaut Corps and appointed an ambassador for UK science and space-based careers
2010: Completed 14 months of astronaut basic training
2011: Peake and five other astronauts joined a team living in caves in Sardinia for a week.
2012: Spent 12 days living in a permanent underwater base in Florida
2013: Assigned a six-month mission to the International Space Station
2015: Will embark on the Principia mission, a long-duration flight to the ISS

The astronaut's last evening on Earth until next summer was spent having a massage and, following cosmonaut tradition, watching White Sun of the Desert, a cult Russian film.

And, at a press conference given from behind glass to protect him from infection, he said the thing he is looking forward to most is looking back at Earth.

Major Peake said: 'I don't think anything can truly prepare you for that moment and that will occur in the Soyuz spacecraft once we get injected into orbit.

'I'll be able to look out the right window and see the beautiful view of Planet Earth. We've been so busy focused on this mission that I kind of forgot Christmas was just over a week away.

'Our thoughts will be with everybody on Earth enjoying Christmas, and with our friends and family, of course.'

As he was waved off by family and friends earlier today – including parents Nigel and Angela - from the Cosmonaut Hotel in Kazakhstan today, well-wishers gathered waving Union flags, cheering and shouting 'go Tim'.

His youngest son Oliver, four, who was sitting on the shoulders of his grandfather, Tim's father-in-law, cried loudly as he waved to his father while sobbing: 'I want to go with Daddy.'

He was consoled by his mother as he clutched a toy.

Major Peake and his crew mates waved and smiled before stepping on to the bus that took them to the 'suiting-up' building.

There the trio donned their pressure suits ahead of being transported to the launch pad.


This image, taken from the official live feed of the Principia mission by the European Space Agency, shows Tim Peake giving a thumbs up from a different angle, from a different on-board camera


Tim Peake waves to reporters, photographers and Esa engineers in his space suit as he gets ready to board the Soyuz TMA-19M at the Baikonur cosmodrome


Tim Peake follows tradition and signs a door at the Cosmonaut Hotel before his launch to the International Space Station. On the day of launch cosmonauts always sign their hotel room door and leave the hotel to the sound of Soviet-era Zemlyane, The Earthlings


A detailed look at the several stages of Major Peake's six-hour flight to the International Space Station

TIM PEAKE'S PRINCIPIA MISSION LOGO



After a daunting process of elimination, a logo has been chosen for ESA astronaut Tim Peake’s Principia mission to the International Space Station in 2015.

The BBC’s Blue Peter children's programme asked schoolchildren to design a mission patch for Tim and received more than 3000 entries.

The winning entry is by 13-year-old Troy, who explains: “Principia refers to Isaac Newton’s principal laws of gravity and motion so I drew an apple because that is how he discovered gravity.

“Plus Tim Peake is promoting healthy eating as part of his mission and apples are healthy.” Fittingly, a stylised Space Station glints in the apple.

The Soyuz rocket taking Tim into space flies over the UK as the colours of the Union Flag run along the border.


As they were leaving, music was played - an old Russian song about a cosmonaut pining for home.

Among those to congregate were Major Peake's best man, former Army Air Corps pilot Ian Curry, 50, who said: 'I'm hugely excited about the launch.

'For me it's a once in a lifetime opportunity to see a tremendously exciting thing and one of my best mates is on board. Tim and I are great mates, we've been pretty tight for 27 years.'

Mr Curry, who now lives in Alabama in the US, revealed that the Peake family, including Major Peake's wife Rebecca, discussed whether being an astronaut was the right thing for him.




Major Peake (left, and right waving goodbye to friends and family before leaving for his journey) blasted off for the six-hour trip at 11.03am


The crew: Tim Peake (left), Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko (centre) and US astronaut Tim Kopra (right) blasted-off earlier today


The Soyuz FG Rocket, pictured, is carrying British astronaut Tim Peake to the International Space Station

He said: 'The family had a discussion about it and saw it as a big opportunity. They said, 'Go for it'. Rebecca's incredibly supportive and has been all the way through.

'Time is an incredibly patient person. He maintains equilibrium terribly well. Things that would be too much for me, he just deals with.'

As Major Peake and his colleagues left the Cosmonaut Hotel in Baikonur, they signed the door of their hotel room. This is one of a number of traditions that the astronauts and cosmonauts will carry out ahead of the launch.

Many are linked to Yuri Gagarin, including a pre-launch ritual in whic flowers are placed at a memorial wall that honours him and the four cosmonauts who lost their lives during space missions.




Major Tim Peake pictured in his Chichester school uniform, left, and as a cadet, right. He has become Britain's first fully-fledged astronaut


US astronaut Tim Kopra waves from a bus during a sending-off ceremony at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan


Tim Kopra reacts as his space suit is tested at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome, prior to blasting off to the ISS

BRITONS IN SPACE

Major Peake is not the first British astronaut to have flown in space, but others have had private funding or taken dual citizenship.

Sheffield-born Helen Sharman had to secure private funding to become the first Briton in space.

In 1991, the chemist spent a week at the Mir space station on Project Juno, a project launched between a number of UK companies and the Soviet government.

A number of British-born astronauts have also flown under an American flag including Piers Sellers, Nicholas Patrick and Greg Johnson.

The most experienced British-born astronaut is Michael Foale, who was turned down twice before being accepted as a Nasa astronaut.

Born with dual-citizenship, Foale flew as an American on his missions, which included extended stays on the Mir station and the ISS.

British-born games developer Richard Garriott used his vast personal fortune to follow in the footsteps of his father, Nasa astronaut Owen Garriott, and travel to the ISS on a Russian rocket in 2008.



A visit is also paid to Gagarin's office, which has been preserved as a shrine.

Other more bizarre traditions include allowing cosmonauts to urinate on the right rear wheel of the bus and get a smack on the bottom from the chief designer when waving goodbye to the space workers before launch.

Other traditions and superstitions apply to the rocket and spacecraft capsule.

Cosmonauts are, for instance, not allowed to attend the roll-out of the Soyuz rocket before launch as this is thought to bring bad luck, while coins are put on the rails when the rocket is brought to the launch pad by train to be flattened by the rocket as it passes to bring good luck.

Although these images may be interpreted as inspirational or simple good luck charms, you could also argue there is a spiritual dimension to them, an attempt to order the unknown in what is essentially a high-risk, stressful enterprise.

The crew will later salute the state commission - Cosmodrome officials - before being taken to Launch Pad 1 and climbing into the tiny Soyuz TMA-19 space capsule on top of the rocket.

During the last six years, Major Peake, a former helicopter test pilot, has lived in an underground cave, spent 12 days on the bottom of the sea, and taken lessons in science and Russian in preparation for the trip of a lifetime.

He was selected as an Esa astronaut in May 2009 from a pool of more than 8,000 applicants and completed his Astronaut Basic Training in November 2010.

In 2011, he joined a mission as part of an international team living underground for a week and exploring a cave system in Sardinia, with the focus on human behaviour and performance in extreme environments.

In June 2012, he spent 12 days in the Aquarius habitat 66ft (20 metres) below the sea off the coast of Florida.

This area allows space agencies to test devices and conduct research for future missions.

Later that year, Major Peake completed his spacewalk training using the Russian Orlan spacesuit and the US Extravehicular Mobility Unit - suits that are specially built for the activity.

Elsewhere, Major Peake is a keen skier, scuba diver and mountaineer, plans to run a marathon while on the ISS.

He will embark on the gruelling 26.2 mile (42.2 km) task in April, using the ISS' treadmill at the same time as runners on Earth are tackling the London Marathon.


Each space suit is put through a series of tests to make sure it can keep the astronauts and cosmonauts safe during the flight and during the transition into the space station

However, the bulk of his time will be spent maintaining the ageing space station and monitoring hundreds of experiments – more than 20 of which he will conduct on himself.

Major Peake is not the first British astronaut to have flown in space, but others have had private funding or taken dual citizenship.

Sheffield-born Helen Sharman had to secure private funding to become the first Briton in space.

In 1991, the chemist spent a week at the Mir space station on Project Juno, a project launched between a number of UK companies and the Soviet government.

Now 52 and a chemist at Imperial College London, she has told the major to enjoy the view: 'Imprint the colours of the Earth on your memory because they do not appear the same on recreated images.'


A Russian Orthodox priest at a ceremony to bless the Soyuz FG rocket in Kazakhstan prior to its mission to the International Space Station

A number of British-born astronauts have also flown under an American flag including Piers Sellers, Nicholas Patrick and Greg Johnson.

The most experienced British-born astronaut is Michael Foale, who was turned down twice before being accepted as a Nasa astronaut.

Born with dual-citizenship, Foale flew as an American on his missions, which included extended stays on the Mir station and the ISS.

British-born games developer Richard Garriott used his vast personal fortune to follow in the footsteps of his father, Nasa astronaut Owen Garriott, and travel to the ISS on a Russian rocket in 2008.

IN CAVES AND UNDER THE SEA: GOING TO BIZARRE LENGTHS FOR TRAINING

Before blast-off, astronauts have to undergo a rigorous training programme that involves them visiting training centres in the US, Russia, Japan, Canada and Europe.

Each recruit who wants to qualify as an astronaut must first complete a one-year course of basic training. They have classroom lessons in technology and science and learn basic medical skills.

Recruits also become familiar with scuba diving. The similarity between the conditions underwater and in space means the activity is an important part of future exercises.

This is followed with a year of advanced training in which the recruits learn about the ISS in more detail and gain a better understanding of the involvement of ground control.

Astronauts can then be assigned to a mission. In Tim Peake's case, this was the ISS mission.

At this point the astronauts specialise, learning about relevant tasks and becoming familiar with the feeling of weightlessness with 'zero-gravity' - or parabolic - flights.

Major Tim remembers his first parabolic flight as a highlight of his training, saying 'it felt very liberating, very natural'.

In 2011, Major Peake joined an international team of five other astronauts who spent a week living in underground caves in Sardinia.


In 2011, Major Peake joined an international team of five other astronauts who spent a week living in underground caves in Sardinia (pictured). The focus of the mission was to explore human behaviour and performance in extreme environments

The focus of the mission was to explore human behaviour and performance in extreme environments.

He said: 'It has much more of a psychological element. We all work together. You get to know a lot about yourself and others and other cultures'.

The following year, Major Peake spent 12 days 20m days in a lab located 65ft underwater near Key Largo, Florida for Nasa's Extreme Environment Mission Operations - known as Neemo.

Neemo allows space agencies to test technologies and conduct research for future missions.

Major Peake's mission focused on developing the tools, techniques and procedures that would be needed to land on an asteroid.

While some might find the exercise daunting, Major Peake said it was 'great'.


Tim Peake (pictured) said at the time: 'It has much more of a psychological element. We all work together. You get to know a lot about yourself and others and other cultures'





Read more: Astronaut Tim Peake gives the thumbs up as he heads towards the ISS on six month odyssey | Daily Mail Online
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Newton's apple pips sent to Tim Peake on ISS

BBC News
19 December 2015


Tim Peake blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Soyuz rocket on Tuesday

Apple seeds from the tree that inspired Sir Isaac Newton will be used in experiments on the International Space Station by British astronaut Tim Peake.

The pips originate from a tree in the orchard of Woolsthorpe Manor, Newton's birthplace, in Lincolnshire.

The seeds are part of the astronaut's mission, named Principia after Newton's book published in 1687.

The apple pips form part of a wider project to see what impact space travel has on their growth.


Left to right: Jannette Warrener, from Woolsthorpe Manor, Jeremy Curtis, from the UK Space Agency, and TV science presenter Dallas Campbell with a pack of the seeds



Esa astronaut Tim Peake's mission onboard the ISS is named Principia, after Sir Isaac Newton's 1687 book


Major Tim Peake with his Principia mission logo and the schoolboy who designed it


Mr Peake, who arrived at the International Space Station on Tuesday, also has a million seeds of rocket on board which will be distributed to 10,000 UK schools on his return.

They arrived along with the apple pips by supply ship earlier in December.

The National Trust, which own Woolsthorpe Manor where Newton did most of his work on Principia, will try to grow trees from the seeds when they are returned in 2016.

'Mutant space tree'

Jannette Warrener, from the trust, said: "We gave apple seeds in September 2014 to the UK space agency in the hope they would go up in Tim Peake's space mission.


Sir Isaac Newton (1642 - 1727) carried out scientific research at Woolsthorpe manor


"One of the intentions would be to bring the seeds back to earth and we'll grow some some space trees and see what happens with those.

"I've got a really cool image in my head of some kind of mutant space tree."

The National Trust hope the project will inspire younger scientists.

Newton's apple tree



The seeds come from a 400-year-old apple tree that is said to have inspired Sir Isaac Newton and his thoughts on gravity.

The popular story goes that an apple fell on the mathematician's head and suddenly everything became clear to him.

It was more likely that he witnessed the apple fall either in the orchard or from his bedroom window.

Martin Kemp, emeritus professor of the history of art at Oxford University's Trinity College, said in 2010 the story originated from a conversation Newton had with scholar William Stukeley.

He recounted the apple story to Stukeley about how it had caused him to investigate the theory of gravitation.

Mr Kemp said: "It was a chance event that got him engaged with something he might otherwise have shelved."



Woolsthorpe Manor, Newton's Lincolnshire birthplace, and (right) the famous apple tree which helped him discover gravity



The tree at is protected by a willow fence


Newton's apple pips sent to Tim Peake on ISS - BBC News
 
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Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Whoop-tee-doo! Why so late to the space station? They wouldn't allow any British components to be installed on it because it their dodgy wiring?



P.S. Does that little fence keep the faeiries out?
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Because Britain used to be opposed to manned space travel, until recently.

I can well imagine! How can you orbit around the world when it's really flat, eh wot?

Anyway, after Beagle, you wouldn't get me onto a British built space craft. ( Electrics by Lucas?)
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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I can well imagine! How can you orbit around the world when it's really flat, eh wot?

Anyway, after Beagle, you wouldn't get me onto a British built space craft. ( Electrics by Lucas?)


Don't make fun of Beagle 2. The nearest Canada's ever got to having its own space vehicle is launching a Lego man to the edge of the atmosphere.

 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Canada was the third country in the world to build and launch a space vehicle, after the USSR and USA. It lasted, too and continued to operate long after it had become obsolete. It was eventually deactivated by command from the ground.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alouette_1


Bull****. Britain was. Canada was fourth. It even says in the link: "Canada was the fourth country to operate a satellite, as the British Ariel 1, constructed in the United States by NASA, preceded Alouette 1 by five months."

As for Alouette 1, it was constructed by de Havilland Canada, a Canadian branch of a British aviation manufacturer.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Bull****. Britain was. Canada was fourth. It even says in the link: "Canada was the fourth country to operate a satellite, as the British Ariel 1, constructed in the United States by NASA, preceded Alouette 1 by five months."

As for Alouette 1, it was constructed by de Havilland Canada, a Canadian branch of a British aviation manufacturer.

Not by that time.

DeHavilland of Canada still exists, still makes lots of aircraft and has zero connection with the U K at all. It is wholly owned by Bombardier.

During this period, deHavilland of Canada was designing and building Canadian aircraft for the Canadian market and the only connection with the UK was that you were recipients of their exports, notably the DHC Chipmunk trainer that the RAF used as well as the RCAF, who commissioned the craft. There were also the Breaver, the Otter, the Twin Otter, the Buffalo (exported to the Americans for use in Vietnam) the Caribou and later the Dash 7 and Dash 8 and its many derivatives. All of these aircraft are still in use, are venerable workhorses in their respective markets and are as tough as nails.

Bull****. Britain was. Canada was fourth. It even says in the link: "Canada was the fourth country to operate a satellite, as the British Ariel 1, constructed in the United States by NASA, preceded Alouette 1 by five months."

As for Alouette 1, it was constructed by de Havilland Canada, a Canadian branch of a British aviation manufacturer.

You should read it again. The British bought a satellite from the Yanks. We developed and built our own using more advanced technology than was otherwise available.

It's sort of like the Canadian designed and built components of the ISS. I hope that your "astronaught" enjoys his stay. Just keep him the hell away from the wiring!

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Space_Agency
 
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Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Washington DC
The rocket that will carry UK astronaut Tim Peake into orbit has arrived at the launch pad in Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

At 01:00 GMT (07:00 local time), the Soyuz launcher was rolled out on its flat-bed transporter for the 2km train journey to the pad.

The train took almost two hours to reach the pad, known as Site No 1.

Mr Peake - who will be the first British astronaut to visit the ISS and the first UK Government-backed astronaut - will be accompanied by American Tim Kopra and Russian Yuri Malenchenko on Tuesday's flight to the International Space Station (ISS).

Really? After all this time. . .

Y'all Briddish getting used to sucking hind t*t now, where y'all used to be the leaders?
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Not by that time.

DeHavilland of Canada still exists, still makes lots of aircraft and has zero connection with the U K at all. It is wholly owned by Bombardier.

During this period, deHavilland of Canada was designing and building Canadian aircraft for the Canadian market and the only connection with the UK was that you were recipients of their exports, notably the DHC Chipmunk trainer that the RAF used as well as the RCAF, who commissioned the craft. There were also the Breaver, the Otter, the Twin Otter, the Buffalo (exported to the Americans for use in Vietnam) the Caribou and later the Dash 7 and Dash 8 and its many derivatives. All of these aircraft are still in use, are venerable workhorses in their respective markets and are as tough as nails.

De Havilland Canada was created in 1928 by the British de Havilland Aircraft Company, of which it was a mere subsidiary.

The number of aircraft it built was small compared to the number built by de Havilland itself.

Today, Britain still has the world's second-largest aerospace industry.



You should read it again. The British bought a satellite from the Yanks.

No, they didn't.

The UK's Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC) proposed the development of Ariel 1 to NASA, following an offer made by the United States at a meeting of the Committee on Space Research to provide assistance to other countries with the development and launch of scientific spacecraft. By early the following year the two countries had decided upon terms for the programme's scope and which organisations would be responsible for which parts of the programme. It was designed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and it led to Britain being the third country after the USSR and then the USA to have its own satellite in space.

As with Ariel 1, Canada's Alouette was also designed in collaboration with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

It's sort of like the Canadian designed and built components of the ISS.

Whoopee-do! The UK designed and built components of Esa's Philae comet lander.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
25,756
295
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There's a reason the brits haven't really had their own space program.