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    ESA > Our Activities > Human Spaceflight > Delta Mission

    DELTA Mission facts

    Mission: Soyuz flight 8S to the International Space Station. The crew included Dutch ESA astronaut André Kuipers. During his stay on ISS André Kuipers worked on a substantial programme of experiments as well as educational and PR activities. The mission also served to exchange the permanent ISS crew; Expedition 9 flew to ISS, Expedition 8 returned to Earth together with Kuipers. Furthermore, the Soyuz, which serves as a rescue vehicle for the resident ISS crew in case of an onboard emergency, was replaced. The Soyuz needs to be replaced every six months.

    Launch:
    19 April 2004, 07:19 Moscow time (05:19 CEST, 03:19 UT)

    Docking:
    21 April 2004, 09:01 Moscow time (07:01 CEST, 05:01 UT)

    Hatch opening and ingress:
    21 April 2004, 10:27 Moscow time (08:27 CEST, 06:27 UT)

    Hatch closure:
    29 April 2004, 21:47 Moscow time (19:47 CEST, 17:47 UT)

    Undocking:
    30 April 2004, 00:52 Moscow time (29 April, 22:52 CEST, 20:52 UT)

    Landing:
    30 April 2004, 04:11 Moscow time (02:12 CEST; 00:12 UT)

    Launch site:
    Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan

    Landing site:
    Kazakh Steppe, near town of Arkalyk

    Launch vehicle
    Soyuz TMA-4

    Return vehicle
    Soyuz TMA-3

    Crew Soyuz 8S (up):
    Commander Gannadi Padalka (Russia)
    Flight Engineer André Kuipers (ESA)
    Flight Engineer E. Michael Fincke (NASA)

    Crew Soyuz 7S (down):
    Commander Alexander Kaleri (Russia)
    Flight Engineer André Kuipers (ESA)
    Flight Engineer Michael Foale (NASA)

    Back-up crew
    Leroy Chiao (NASA)
    Gerhard Thiele (ESA)
    Salizhan S. Sharipov (Russia)

    Last update: 30 April 2004

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